List of ContributorsPrefaceNo Title: Brief /Draft Lead Author(s) & AuthorsIntroduction: European Communication History as challenging but worthwhile projectPaschal Preston, Klaus Arnold, Susanne Kinnebrock1 Struggles over 'Press Freedom' and 'Public Spheres': Competing Conceptualizations, Values, NormsJürgen Wilke, Jaume Guillamet, Svennik Høyer and Nils E Øy2 The 'New' Newspapers: The Popular Press in Britain, Portugal, Russia and Germany, late-1800s to Early-1900sAnthony Cawley, Helena Lima, Olga Kruglikova and Thomas Birkner3 European Film since the 1890s: A Media Sector in the Shadow of HollywoodRoderick Flynn4 Organizing a New Medium: the Emergence of Radio Broadcasting in EuropeKlaus Arnold, Barbara Köpplová, Jan Cebe and Nelson Ribeiro5 The First World War and The Emergence of Modern PropagandaNelson Ribeiro, Anne Schmidt, Sian Nicholas, Olga Kruglikova and Koenraad Du Pont6 Modernization, Democratization and Politicization: Mass Media in 1920s EuropeJochen Hung, Mark Hampton, Peppino Ortoleva, Joris van Eijnatten and Lennart Weibull7 Crises, Rise of Fascism and the Establishment of Authoritarian Media SystemsPatrick Merziger, Gabriele Balbi, Carlos Barrera, and Balázs Sipos8 The Russian Revolution and the Establishment of the Authoritarian Media SystemOlga Kruglikova, and Konstantin Alexeev9 International Radio Broadcasting during World War IINelson Ribeiro, Hans-Ulrich Wagner and Agnieszka Morriss10 Media after 1945: Continuities and New BeginningsHans-Ulrich Wagner, Hugh Chignell, Marie Cronqvist, Christoph Hilgert and Kristin Skoog11 Media and the Cold War: The East/West ConflictMichael Meyen, Kaarle Nordenstreng, Carlos Barrera and Walery Pisarek12 Authoritarian Media Control in Eastern Europe, Spain, Portugal and Greece After World War IIAnke Fiedler, Helena Lima, Emmanuel Heretakis, Balázs Sipos, Juan Antonio García Galindo and Antonio Cuartero13 Rise of Television: Institutionalization and the Forming of National AudiencesAndreas Fickers, Dana Mustata and Anne-Katrin Weber14 The Introduction of Commercial Broadcasting to EuropeRosa Franquet, Guisseppe Richeri and Matthew Hibberd15 History of the Media in Central and Eastern EuropePéter Bajomi-Lázár, Auks Bal ytien, Alina Dobreva and Beata Klimkiewicz16 Media Concentration and the Rise of Multinational CompaniesJuan P Artero, Roderick Flynn and Damian Guzek17 EU Democratic Deficits: The EU Project and a European Public SphereKatharine Sarikakis and Olga Kolokytha18 The Emergence of the Internet and the End of Journalism?Christian Oggolder, Niels Brügger, Monika Metykova, Ramón Salaverría and Eugenia Siapera19 Professionalisms and Journalism History: Lessons from European variationsRisto Kunelius, Olivier Baisnée and Sergio Splendore20 The Development of Journalism Education in EuropeCarlos Barrera and Michael Harnischmacher21 New Media and Audience BehaviorSusanne Eichner, Yesim Kaptan, Elizabeth Prommer and Yulia Yurtaeva-Martens22 Americanization, or: the Rhetoric of Modernity How European Journalism Adapted US Norms, Practices and ConventionsMarcel Broersma23 Gender, Media and ModernityAdrian Bingham, Matilde Eiroa, Susanne Kinnebrock and Claire McCallum24 Ethnic Minorities and the Media - A Struggle for Voice, Self and Community?Christian Schwarzenegger, Gabriele Falböck, Merja Ellefson, Irati Agirreazkuenaga, Alicia Ferrández Ferrer, Heike Graf and Marina Yanglyaeva25 Imagined New Spaces of Political Solidarity in the 1880s-1920s: Beyond the National?Paschal PrestonContributors: Listing and very brief biogIndex
Klaus Arnold (1968-2017) was Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Trier University, Trier, Germany.Paschal Preston is Professor Emeritus, School of Communication, Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland.Susanne Kinnebrock is Professor of Communication with focus on Public Communication, University of Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.