Mass media in India: Difference between revisions
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II News Agencies |
II News Agencies |
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III Newspapers |
III Newspapers |
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IV Radio |
IV Radio |
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V Television |
V Television |
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VI New media |
VI New media |
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VII Milestones |
VII Milestones |
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VIII Important personalities |
VIII Important personalities |
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IX Journalism education |
IX Journalism education |
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X External links |
X External links |
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I Introduction |
I Introduction |
Revision as of 07:02, 30 September 2003
Mass media/India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Media in India, especially news media, are undergoing significant changes in the current liberalised environment. To understanding of this change, one needs to have some idea of the road traversed so far. It is useful to look at media in the two phases of India's history - pre-colonial and post-colonial. Each medium has taken its own evolutionary path. We shall examine them individually. The National and the English press; Bofors and Tehelka; The Hindu and India Express ; Times of India and Statesman; India Today and Outlook; Pothan Joseph and G Kasturi; N Ram and Vinod Mehta; The Hoot and IndianOnlineJournalism.Org (Disclosure: edited by me) are not contrasts but a sampling of the range that needs to be covered here.
Contents: I Introduction
(i)The Pre-independence era (ii) The Post-independence era
II News Agencies
III Newspapers
IV Radio
V Television
VI New media
VII Milestones
VIII Important personalities
IX Journalism education
X External links
I Introduction
'A Chronicle of Media and the State', by Jeebesh Bagchi in the Sarai Reader 2001 is a handy timeline to look at the growth of media over more than a century.