Freedom of the Air and the Public Interest

Freedom of the Air and the Public Interest

$32.00

SKU: 9780809327195
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Description

A unique and definitive study of freedom of expression rights in electronic media from the 1920s through the mid-1930s, Louise M. Benjamin’s Freedom of the Air and the Public Interest: First Amendment Rights in Broadcasting to 1935 examines the evolution of free speech rights in early radio.
Drawing on primary resources from sixteen archives plus contemporary secondary sources, Benjamin analyzes interactions among the players involved and argues that First Amendment rights in radio evolved in the 1920s and 1930s through the interaction of many entities having social, political, or economic interests in radio. She shows how free speech and First Amendment rights were defined and perceived up to 1935.

Focusing on the evolution of various electronic media rights, Benjamin looks at censorship, speakers’ rights of access to the medium, broadcasters’ rights to use radio as they desired, and listeners’ rights to receive information via the airwaves. With many interested parties involved, conflict was inevitable, resulting in the establishment of industry policies and government legislation—particularly the Radio Act of 1927. Further debate led to the Communications Act of 1934, which has provided the regulatory framework for broadcasting for over sixty years. Controversies caused by new technology today continue to rage over virtually the same rights and issues that Benjamin deals with.

LouiseM. Benjamin is an associate professor in the Department of Telecommunications at the University of Georgia. She is a member of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, the Broadcast Education Association, the International Communication Association, and the National Communication Association. She has worked in television broadcasting as a writer, producer, and director and has written numerous articles and book chapters on the history and regulation of electronic media.

“Benjamin provides a concise, thorough, and neutrally stanced history of the development of commercial radio broadcasting, with a special emphasis on the legislative history and some discussion of the legal history as well. I see this document as primarily a historical chronicle—a retelling in one place of a complex story.”—Warren Sandmann, Mankato State University
“Louise Benjamin…has written a carefully documented, illuminating book…It is exactly the kind of well defined study that we can use to help understand the future by examining the past.”—Michael D. Murray, Journalism History

Additional information

Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in