Now Playing Frank G. ZöllnerLocates the origins of the mass audience and the emergence of everyday moviegoing in the culture of cities. Winner of the 2009 Gertrude J. Robinson Book Prize presented by the Canadian Communication Association Using Toronto as a case study, and focusing on a period from the opening of the first theaters showcasing moving pictures in 1906 to the end of World War I, Now Playing locates the origins of our present day mass audience in the culture of
on the core of the energy question: How do we wish to live in the world
between experiences lived inside the prison cell and outside it
and the legacies for relief work today
it rehabilitates the reputation of the artisan communities of bricklayers
seem almost beyond belief
and captures the complex interplay between black students' accommodation to the official achievement ideology and their resistance to the powerful structural forces operating within the school
efforts have been made to develop naturally non- or low-caffeinated varieties
but seemingly unmarked as racial subjects
After providing an introduction to divination and cartomancy
His major league baseball dreams dashed
important advancements have been made in understanding pheromones and their uses
and engaged responses by a variety of influential critics