Description
About the Author
Rachel Schreiber is Dean and Vice President for Academic Affairs at the San Francisco Art Institute, California, USA.
Reviews
'In an era increasingly dominated by digital social media and their remarkable potential for today's political activists, this thought-provoking collection illuminates the crucial role mass print culture played in the birth of modern activism. Rachel Schreiber has called upon a strong set of scholars across several disciplines to map a vast terrain of print-based activism, ranging from the activities of the KKK and the Communist Party to the homophile movement of the 1950s. Essential reading for scholars of print culture, modernism, post-WWII political and social history, media studies, and visual culture, and, indeed, for anyone interested in this turbulent period of American history.' Mark S. Morrisson, Penn State University and co-editor of the Journal of Modern Periodical Studies '...this book succeeds both in the organizing vision of the editor and in the rigorous work of the contributors, whose efforts are manifest in the close and careful analysis of each chapter's wealth of primary sources...Schreiber's Modern Print Activism in the United States should be viewed, then, as an exciting foray into print culture studies that offers a compelling argument for the importance of twentieth-century print activism by allowing the detailed analyses of the work's contributors to convey that sense of importance in their research.' Publishing History
Book Information
ISBN 9781138248281
Author Rachel Schreiber
Format Paperback
Page Count 270
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight(grams) 453g