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The Politics of ZOOM

Other Sources:

  • Pam Benson, ZOOMers Revisited: Where Are They Now? (Boston: WGBH Educational Foundation, 1998).

  • Bernice Chesler, Do a Zoom Do (New York: Little Brown & Co, 1975).

  • David Kamp, Sunny Days: The Children's Television Revolution that Changed America (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2020)

  • Lloyd N. Morrisett, “The Age of Television and the Television Age,” Peabody Journal of Education 48, no. 2 (January 1971): 112-21.

  • Leslie Paris, “Send it to ZOOM!: American Children's Television and Intergenerational Cultural Creation in the 1970s” in Rachel Conrad and Brown Kennedy, eds., Literary Cultures and Twentieth Century Childhoods (New York: Palgrave, 2020), 237-54.

  • WGBH Educational Foundation, The ZOOM Catalog: Riddles, Jokes, Stories, Songs, Games, Plays, Puzzles, Poems, Crafts, Art, Guest Interviews (New York: Random House, 1972).

  • ZOOM” produced by John Nagy and Newton Wayland, in Come on and ZOOM, A&M Records, 1974.

Next: Notes

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