| Media Studies Journal 1999 |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| "1968.".(includes reply)(response to article by journalist/author Andrew Tyndall, Media Studies Journal, fall 1998 issue) | Mass communications | Fouhy, Edward |
| A fatal error: the press conference that opened the Berlin Wall. | Mass communications | Tusa, Ann |
| An enormously difficult task.(Covering China )(obtaining hard statistical data on business in China) | Mass communications | Branathan, Joyce |
| A taste of freedom in Russia: journalism between the past and the future. | Mass communications | Azhgikhina, Nadezhda |
| A Web of sound: the fruitful convergence of radio, audio and the Internet. | Mass communications | Donow, Kenneth R., Miles, Peggy |
| B92 of Belgrade: free voices on the airwaves and the Internet. | Mass communications | Pantic, Drazen |
| Beyond the square.(Covering China )(1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, Beijing, China) | Mass communications | Wakeman, Carolyn |
| Business news and international reporting. | Mass communications | Lambert, Richard |
| Business reporting in Eastern Europe: new markets, new journalism. | Mass communications | Nelson, Mark M. |
| Charting new terrain.(Covering China )(women's problems in China, early 1998) | Mass communications | Lin, Jennifer |
| China from here and there.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Chang, Tsan-Kuo |
| Chinese media in flux: from Party line to bottom line.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | FlorCruz, Jaime A. |
| Civil society and the spirit of 1989: lessons for journalism, from East to West. | Mass communications | Rosen, Jay |
| Covering the Chinese civil war.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Topping, Seymour |
| Desperation in Shanghai.(Covering China )(stampede at Bank of China, Shanghai, Dec 1948) | Mass communications | Topping, Audrey Ronning |
| Echoes of the May 4th movement.(Covering China )(civil rights protest movement beginning May 4, 1919, in China) | Mass communications | Wasserstrom, Jeffrey |
| Eternal China?(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Spence, Jonathan D. |
| Framing China.(Covering China )(explaining a complex country) | Mass communications | Mann, James |
| From admiration to confrontation: six decades of American reporting about China.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Farmer, Edward L. |
| From hellholes with love: insurgent journalism from Poland to Pristina.(New Republic special correspondent Anna Husarska)(Interview) | Mass communications | Snyder, Robert W. |
| Gazeta Wyborcza at 10: the progress of Poland since communism. | Mass communications | Michnik, Adam |
| Gnats chasing an elephant: press criticism grounded in the public interest has yielded to media criticism that seeks consumer satisfaction. | Mass communications | Boylan, James |
| Guiding public opinion.(Covering China )(China's media policy) | Mass communications | Qing, Dai |
| Hong Kong: still a window between China and the west.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Chan, Ying |
| How I became a witch: nationalism, sexism and postcommunist journalism in Croatia. | Mass communications | Drakulic, Slavenka |
| Lawyers, voyeurs and vigilantes: journalists and our democratic institutions are in a dangerously deformed relationship. | Mass communications | Carey, James W. |
| Learning and teaching.(Covering China )(interview with journalist/scholar Orville Schell)(Interview) | Mass communications | Snyder, Robert W. |
| Lessons for the media from foreign aid: journalists in newly democratic countries must chart their own course. | Mass communications | Hamilton, John Maxwell |
| Letter from the future - II: change is for the better when journalists stop seeing themselves as victims. | Mass communications | Overholser, Geneva |
| Letter from the future - I: journalism in 2025 isn't pretty. | Mass communications | Weise, Elizabeth |
| Magazines: a past in paper and a future on the Web. | Mass communications | Abrahamson, David |
| Missionary roots.(Covering China )(publisher Henry R. Luce) | Mass communications | Brinkley, Alan |
| Naked bodies, runaway ratings: TV Nova and the Czech Republic. | Mass communications | Druker, Jeremy |
| Network and cable TV: from electronic hearth to TV news on demand. | Mass communications | Pope, Kyle |
| New news, new ideas: deans explore the challenges of educating the journalists of the future.(interviews with Ken Bode, David Rubin, Geoffrey Cowan, Orville Schell, Tom Goldstein, Robert Ruggles and Terry Hynes)(Interview) | Mass communications | Kelley, Jennifer |
| Newspapers: figure out how to give readers a choice and take your eye off the quarterly earnings report. | Mass communications | Bogart, Leo |
| New wars, new correspondents: a shrinking world demands more international news, not less. | Mass communications | Sullivan, Stacy |
| Nixon goes to China.(Covering China )(1972 state visit to China by then president Richard M. Nixon) | Mass communications | Frankel, Max |
| One act, many meanings.(Covering China )(photo of Chinese citizen stepping in front of and stopping a column of Chinese army tanks, Beijing, 1989) | Mass communications | Gordon, Richard |
| On the border of visibility: Western media and the Uyghur minority.(Covering China ) | Mass communications | Gladney, Dru C. |
| Pearl S. Buck.(Covering China )(woman author and journalist) | Mass communications | Conn, Peter |
| Peering forward: the conduct of the news media is part of a fretful arc of apprehension that spans the 20th century. | Mass communications | Dornan, Christopher |
| Poisonous neglect: environmental issues are undercovered in Central and Eastern Europe. | Mass communications | Prakash, Reshma |
| Power from the people: new media in and about East Central Europe. | Mass communications | Johnson, Owen V. |
| Presidential and scandalous.(Covering China )(Chinese coverage of personal news or scandals foreign political officials or celebrities) | Mass communications | Cunningham, Philip J. |
| Radio and the fall of Communism: did BBC broadcasts make a difference? | Mass communications | Tusa, John |
| Roma in the Hungarian media: in unstable times, images with dangerous consequences appear. | Mass communications | Kerenyi, Gyorgy |
| Seeing past the wall: network coverage of Central and Eastern Europe since 1989. | Mass communications | Tyndall, Andrew |
| Stars in the Gutenberg galaxy: 1989 and the Polish emigre press. | Mass communications | Gross, Irena Grudzinska |
| Struggles for independent journalism: ten years of learning and teaching, from Poland to Yugoslavia. | Mass communications | Aumente, Jerome |
| The bumpy road to regulation: achieving editorial freedom in broadcasting and cyberspace. | Mass communications | Brotman, Stuart N. |
| The future is the Net: news on-line is here to stay. | Mass communications | Katz, Jon |
| The genie is out of the bottle: measuring media change in Central and Eastern Europe. | Mass communications | Jakubowicz, Karol |
| The goddess of democracy.(Covering China )(statue erected in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China during the height of the China democracy movement in May 1989) | Mass communications | Liu, Melinda |
| The invisible hand.(Covering China )(free markets in China) | Mass communications | Mufson, Steve |
| The renaissance of Jewish media: imagining and organizing a future. | Mass communications | Gruber, Ruth Ellen |
| The 'romantic' generation.(Covering China )(reporters and reporting of Sino-US relations in the 1930s and 1940s) | Mass communications | MacKinnon, Stephen |
| Transforming Hungarian broadcasting: struggles for independent media. | Mass communications | Molnar, Peter |
| Transitions - a regional summary: a country-by-country review of the media and press freedom in former Warsaw Pact nations since 1989. | Mass communications | Rubin, Joel |
| Uncovering Three Gorges Dam.(Covering China )(controversial mammoth hydroelectric project on the Yangtze River, China) | Mass communications | Mei, Wu |
| Until old cats learn how to bark: Czechoslovak dissidents fought communism without learning good lessons for journalism. | Mass communications | Urban, Jan |
| Wall fall profits, wall fall losses: the media and German reunification. | Mass communications | Russ-Mohl, Stephan |
| War's most innocent victim.(Covering China )(the young) | Mass communications | Yang, Daqing |
| What's the rush? An e-epistolary debate on the 24-hour news clock. | Mass communications | Gitlin, Todd, Kansas, Dave |
| Who's a journalist? - I. | Mass communications | Gup, Ted |
| Who's a journalist? - II: welcome the new journalists on the Internet. | Mass communications | Godwin, Mike |
| Who will be journalists in the next century? | Mass communications | Weaver, David |
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