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The Politics of/within Educational Television in the 1960s

Sources and Suggested Reading:

  • Robert K. Avery and Robert Pepper, "An Institutional History of Public Broadcasting," Journal of Communications 30.3 (1980): 126-38.

  • Robert K. Avery and Robert Pepper, The Politics of Interconnection: A History of Public Television at the National Level (Washington, DC: National Association of Educational Broadcasters, 1979).

  • Carolyn N. Brooks, "Documentary Programming and the Emergence of the National Educational Television Center as a Network, 1958-1972" (PhD diss., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1994).

  • James Day, The Vanishing Vision: The Inside Story of Public Television (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995).

  • Ralph Engelman, Public Radio and Television in America: A Political History (Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, 1996).

  • James Ledbetter, Made Possible By . . .: The Death of Public Broadcasting in the United States (New York: Verso, 1998).

  • Laurie Ouellette, Viewers Like You?: How Public TV Failed the People (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002).

  • Allison Perlman, Public Interests: Media Advocacy and Struggles over U.S. Television (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2016).

  • David M. Stone, Nixon and the Politics of Public Television (New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1985).

  • John Witherspoon, Roselle Kovitz, Robert K. Avery, and Alan G. Stavitsky, A History of Public Broadcasting (Washington, DC: Current, 2000).

  • Donald N. Wood, "The First Fifteen Years of the ‘Fourth Network,'" Journal of Broadcasting 13.2 (1969): 131-144.

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