One Happy Author
May, 25, 2009

http://ezrawinton.com/2009/04/28/mediascapes-book-is-out-my-first-academic-publishing-accomplishment/
Being a blog by Leslie Regan Shade

http://ezrawinton.com/2009/04/28/mediascapes-book-is-out-my-first-academic-publishing-accomplishment/
Just published from Nelson Education (link here)
Preface
PART I: INSTITUTIONAL HISTORY AND THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO CANADIAN COMMUNICATION STUDIES
Introduction
Leslie Regan Shade
1. Considering Critical Communication Studies in Canada
Sheryl Hamilton, Carleton University
2. Postcolonialism and Communication Studies
Amin Alhassan, York University
3. Beyond The “F” Word: A Constellation of Feminist Concepts for Media Researchers
Kim Sawchuk, Concordia University
4. Canadian Cultural Policy in the Age of Media Abundance: Old Challenges, New Technologies
Ira Wagman and Ezra Winton, Carleton University
PART II: AUDIENCES AND THE CULTURAL MARKETPLACE IN CANADA’S MEDIASCAPE
Introduction
Leslie Regan Shade
5. Audience-Making: Issues in Canadian Audience
Catherine Murray, Simon Fraser University
6. Advertising in Canada
Russell Johnston, Brock University
7. Surviving the Slings and Arrows of Canadian Television: A Case Study of Success
Bart Beaty and Rebecca Sullivan, University of Calgary
8. Making a Mockery of Canadian Cinema: Interpreting the Rise of Mock-Documentary
Zoe Druick, Simon Fraser University
9. Selling Youth: Youth Media and the Marketplace
Natalie Coulter, Wilfrid Laurier University
10. Gold for Whom: Canadian Sports, Mega-Events, and the 2010 Olympics
Michael Real, Royal Roads University
11. Blue Froot Loops, Giggling Dough-Boys, and the Smell of Beer: Why the Senses Matter
Charlene Elliott, University of Calgary
PART III: MEDIA OWNERSHIP AND PUBLIC DIALOGUE IN CANADA’S MEDIASCAPE
Introduction
Leslie Regan Shade
12. The Cultures of Democracy: How Ownership and Public Participation Shape Canada’s Media Systems
Leslie Regan Shade and Michael Lithgow, Concordia University and Carleton University
13. Minding The Growing Gaps: Alternative Media in Canada
David Skinner, York University
14. Canadian First Peoples’ Mediascapes: A Snapshot with Three Corners
Lorna Roth, Concordia University
15. The National-Global Nexus of Ethnic and Diasporic Media
Karim Karim, Carleton University
16. Race(Ing) the Nation: Media and Minorities
Yasmin Jiwani, Concordia University
17. Smog and Mirrors: Climate Change and the Janus Face of Public Relations
Josh Greenberg and Elizabeth Westersund, Carleton University
PART IV: THE CANADIAN NEW MEDIA MEDIASCAPE
Introduction
Leslie Regan Shade
18. What is “New Media”, Anyway?
Jacquelyn Burkell, University of Western Ontario
19. Internet Governance: What a Long and Not so Strange Trip It’s Been
Dan Paré, University of Ottawa
20. Privacy in a Networked Environment
Val Steeves, University of Ottawa
21. Balance or Betrayal? Copyright Reform and the Right to Culture in the Digital Age
Dale Bradley, Brock University
22. Mobiles and Mobilities
Judith Nicholson, Wilfrid Laurier University
Contributors
Glossary of Terms
Copyright Acknowledgments
Index
Women and the Web…article by Julie Gedeon, Spring 2009:
http://magazine.concordia.ca/2009/spring/features/women.shtml
A feature called Webbed and Wireless, about Con U research re internet…
http://magazine.concordia.ca/2009/spring/features/webbed.shtml
And from Ethan Feldman in The McGill Daily (March 23, 2009):
http://www.mcgilldaily.com/article/18739
With Internet service providers (ISPs) able to control content and give preferential speed to compliant web sites, questions have been raised about the interconnection between network neutrality and the right to free speech.
Three panelists discussed net neutrality – broadband networks free of restrictions on content, sites, or platforms – on Wednesday, in a talk organized by Flo Schade, U1 Industrial Relations and Vice President of the McGill chapter of Borderless World Volunteers.
Panelist Leslie Shade, associate professor of media studies and MA Program Director at Concordia University, admitted that a discussion revolving around packets and bits often makes the debate unappealing to the average person.
“How can you sex [net neutrality] up a bit? There’s so much technical information that it’s hard for most to get a grasp of why it’s an important issue,” Shade said.
The net neutrality debate centers on what rights ISPs – such as AT&T, Bell, and Videotron – have over the information transferred on their wires, which may restrict end-user’s right to equal access to Internet files.