PLEASE NOTE this is a 2014-15 reading list—the precise content may change in future years. Some generally recommended books: • • • • • • • • • • • Edward Bernays, Propaganda (1928) [The classic of public relations. You can find here: http://www.whale.to/b/bernays.pdf] Walter Lippmann, Public Opinion (1922). [The work that did the most to ‘professionalise’ journalism by calling for a special sense of ‘objectivity’. You can find it here: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/6456] Sue Curry Jansen, Censorship: The Knot that Ties Knowledge and Power (1991) [Best and perhaps only book that talks about state regulation of expression from Plato the Soviet Union, including discussion of ‘self-censorship.] Marshall McLuhan, The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962). [Classic of the transition from speech to print, relatively scholarly by McLuhan’s standards] Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media (1964). [The entire history of modern media in a groovy sixties sort of way: http://beforebefore.net/80f/s11/media/mcluhan.pdf] Evgeny Morozov, The Net Delusion (2010). [Exhaustive critique of the internet – a great antidote to more utopian understandings of the new social media] Geraldine Muhlmann, A Political History of Journalism (Polity 2008) Geraldine Muhlmann, Journalism for Democracy (Polity 2011). Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, The Spiral of Silence (1982). [See ‘Introduction’ below] Douglas Rushkoff, Program or be Programmed (2011). [A proposed solution to our intellectually lazy Apple-fied world: learn computer code, just like you learned how to write] Robert Wuthnow, Communities of Discourse (1989). [Sociological treatment of the flow of information that led to the Protestant Reformation, the Enlightenment and 19c Socialism]