The State and the Mass Media in Japan, 1918-1945University of California Press, 26 เม.ย. 1993 - 335 หน้า Gregory Kasza examines state-society relations in interwar Japan through a case study of public policy toward radio, film, newspapers, and magazines. |
เนื้อหา
The Press | 28 |
Film | 54 |
Radio | 72 |
Democratic Government and Radio Policy | 79 |
Program Control in Practice | 88 |
Personnel and Financial Controls | 97 |
ADMINISTRATIVE REVOLUTION | 119 |
The Consultation System | 168 |
Film | 232 |
Radio | 252 |
Comparative Analysis | 266 |
Overview of State Controls | 299 |
307 | |
319 | |
ฉบับอื่นๆ - ดูทั้งหมด
คำและวลีที่พบบ่อย
administrative approval Army Asahi Asahi Shinbun associations authority autonomy banned broadcasting bureaucratic Cabinet Information Bureau censors censorship censorship standards Chian Iji China Incident Chūō Kōron circulation civil Communications Ministry companies consolidation constitutional consultation criticism culture decree democracy Diet Diet's document elected elites Film Law Firumu foreign Genrō groups Home Ministry Ibid idem imperial imperial Japan industry Itō Hirobumi Japan Japanese journals Kaizō Ken'etsu Nenpō Konoe Konoe's leftist liberal magazines Manchukuo Manchurian Incident mass Masu Media Tōsei media policy Meiji Meiji constitution ment military-bureaucratic Ministry's Minobe Tatsukichi Minobe's Naimushō Keihōkyoku Newspaper Law NHK's Nihon Hōsō Shi officials organs Osaka party governments Peace Preservation Law percent period policymaking political pre-publication warnings press controls Prime Minister producers public order public-interest publishers radical radio renovationist reporting rightist sanctions Seiyukai Shinbun Shintaisei Shōchiku Shōwa Shuppan Keisatsu Gaikan Shuppan Keisatsu Hō social state's tion Tokyo violations