Cracked Media

Cracked Media
Title Cracked Media PDF eBook
Author Caleb Kelly
Publisher MIT Press
Total Pages 399
Release 2009
Genre Avant-garde (Music)
ISBN 0262013142

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"In Cracked Media, Caleb Kelly explores how the deliberate utilization of the normally undesirable (a crack, a break) has become the site of productive creation. Cracked media, Kelly writes, slides across disciplines, through music, sound, and noise. Cracked media encompasses everything from Cage's silences and indeterminacies, to Paik's often humorous tape works, to the cold and clean sounds of digital glitch in the work of Tone and Oval. Kelly offers a detailed historical account of these practices, arguing that they can be read as precursors to contemporary new media.".

Cracked Coverage

Cracked Coverage
Title Cracked Coverage PDF eBook
Author Jimmie Lynn Reeves
Publisher Duke University Press
Total Pages 348
Release 1994
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 9780822314912

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Carefully documenting the deceptions and excesses of television news coverage of the so-called cocaine epidemic, Cracked Coverage stands as a bold indictment of the backlash politics of the Reagan coalition and its implicit racism, the mercenary outlook of the drug control establishment, and the enterprising reporting of crusading journalism. Blending theoretical and empirical analyses, Jimmie L. Reeves and Richard Campbell explore how TV news not only interprets "reality" in ways that reflect prevailing ideologies, but is in many respects responsible for constructing that reality. Their examination of the complexity of television and its role in American social, cultural, and political conflict is focused specifically on the ways in which American television during the Reagan years helped stage and legitimate the "war on drugs," one of the great moral panics of the postwar era. The authors persuasively argue, for example, that powder cocaine in the early Reagan years was understood and treated very differently on television and by the state than was crack cocaine, which was discovered by the news media in late 1985. In their critical analysis of 270 news stories broadcast between 1981 and 1988, Reeves and Campbell demonstrate a disturbing disparity between the earlier presentation of the middle- and upper-class "white" drug offender, for whom therapeutic recovery was an available option, and the subsequent news treatment of the inner-city "black" drug delinquent, often described as beyond rehabilitation and subject only to intensified strategies of law and order. Enlivened by provocative discussions of Nancy Reagan's antidrug activism, the dramatic death of basketball star Len Bias, and the myth of the crack baby, the book argues that Reagan's war on drugs was at heart a political spectacle that advanced the reactionary agenda of the New and Religious Right--an agenda that dismissed social problems grounded in economic devastation as individual moral problems that could simply be remedied by just saying "no." Wide ranging and authoritative, Cracked Coverage: Television News, the Anti-Cocaine Crusade, and the Reagan Legacy is a truly interdisciplinary work that will attract readers across the humanities and social sciences in addition to students, scholars, journalists, and policy makers interested in the media and drug-related issues.

Proceedings of Crack Paths (CP 2006), Parma Italy 2006

Proceedings of Crack Paths (CP 2006), Parma Italy 2006
Title Proceedings of Crack Paths (CP 2006), Parma Italy 2006 PDF eBook
Author
Publisher Gruppo Italiano Frattura
Total Pages 806
Release
Genre
ISBN 889594027X

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Crack Mothers

Crack Mothers
Title Crack Mothers PDF eBook
Author Drew Humphries
Publisher
Total Pages 232
Release 1999
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN

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Humphries (sociology, anthropology, and criminal justice, Rutgers U.) analyzes reactions to crack cocaine use, particularly by women, and critiques the policies instituted to combat it. She argues that policies of zero tolerance, mandatory sentences, and interdiction have failed to reduce drug use, increased the sense of persecution among the urban poor, and contributed to court and prison overcrowding. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Cracked

Cracked
Title Cracked PDF eBook
Author K. M. Walton
Publisher Simon and Schuster
Total Pages 336
Release 2012-12-04
Genre Juvenile Fiction
ISBN 1442429178

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When Bull Mastrick and Victor Konig wind up in the same psychiatric ward at age 16, each recalls and relates in group therapy the bullying relationship they have had since kindergarten as well as facts about themselves and their families that reveal how much they have in common. A first novel.

Convection in Porous Media

Convection in Porous Media
Title Convection in Porous Media PDF eBook
Author D.A. Nield
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages 655
Release 2006-12-06
Genre Technology & Engineering
ISBN 0387334319

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This new edition includes nearly 1000 new references.

How to Fight Presidents

How to Fight Presidents
Title How to Fight Presidents PDF eBook
Author Daniel O'Brien
Publisher Crown
Total Pages 274
Release 2014-03-18
Genre Humor
ISBN 038534757X

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Make no mistake: Our founding fathers were more bandanas-and-muscles than powdered-wigs-and-tea. As a prisoner of war, Andrew Jackson walked several miles barefoot across state lines while suffering from smallpox and a serious head wound received when he refused to polish the boots of the soldiers who had taken him captive. He was thirteen years old. A few decades later, he became the first popularly elected president and served the nation, pausing briefly only to beat a would-be assassin with a cane to within an inch of his life. Theodore Roosevelt had asthma, was blind in one eye, survived multiple gunshot wounds, had only one regret (that there were no wars to fight under his presidency), and was the first U.S. president to win the Medal of Honor, which he did after he died. Faced with the choice, George Washington actually preferred the sound of bullets whizzing by his head in battle over the sound of silence. And now these men—these hallowed leaders of the free world—want to kick your ass. Plenty of historians can tell you which president had the most effective economic strategies, and which president helped shape our current political parties, but can any of them tell you what to do if you encounter Chester A. Arthur in a bare-knuckled boxing fight? This book will teach you how to be better, stronger, faster, and more deadly than the most powerful (and craziest) men in history. You’re welcome.