JOURNAL OF MASS COMMUNICATION STUDIES
Online ISSN : 2432-0838
Print ISSN : 1341-1306
ISSN-L : 1341-1306
Volume 76
Displaying 1-28 of 28 articles from this issue
A Memory of Showa Period and Media
Articles
  • Roger Silverstone’s Works on the Museum and their Possibility
    Toshiro Mitsuoka
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 119-137
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     This paper aims at examining Roger Silverstone’s works on the museum,

    and articulating their possibility in Media Studies. In the 1990’s, Silverstone indicated

    that the characteristic of the museum as a medium is the multi-layered

    disposition of media installed in/through the museum. By expanding his idea,

    the museum can be conceptualized as a media complex, which is a theoretical

    framework to consider both the consumption of the museum as a whole, and

    that of each medium spatially embedded in the museum. This viewpoint would

    also contribute to the current arguments over media consumption in public

    spaces from the 1990’s.

    Download PDF (1537K)
  • A Transformation of Experiences in Media and Technologies in Prewar / Postwar Japan
    Shinya Mizojiri
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 139-156
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     Previous studies of Japanese media history focused on the practices of

    radio amateurs in prewar Japan. However, in postwar Japan, they played a

    more active role. They crafted radio receivers and audio sets themselves, and

    contributed to the development of media technology.

      This paper attempts to describe their practices in prewar and postwar

    Japan. Radio craft was a material practice which meant that crafting equipment

    became a hobby, and the popularization and decline of radio craft in postwar

    Japan was a process in which a diversity of other radio experiences converged

    with receiving programs.

    Download PDF (1563K)
  • Masato Kudo
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 157-176
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     The purpose of this article is to examine the emergence of fashion magazine

    (Hukushoku-Zasshi), especially the change from clothing magazin

    (Hukuso-Zasshi) to fashion magazine. I focus magazine So-en to consider how

    readers read the clothing magazine and fashion magazine. And I explore how

    and when the design of magazine changed. When reading clothing magazine,

    readers read to make western clothes, and when reading fashion magazine

    readers read to develop a sense of style. The change of the way to read

    emerged around 1960, and the design of the magazine changed as well.

    Download PDF (1811K)
  • Empirical Study of the Contents and Technologies of Newspapers’ Websites in Japan
    Atsushi Kotera, Tomoko Takemura
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 177-195
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    In the current Internet environment, newspaper companies manage their

    own websites to provide not only news but various kinds of information. This

    study examined the trend of Japanese newspaper websites, especially focusing

    on what information they disseminate, and what technologies they use.

      In this study, contents and technologies of one hundred and twenty-three

    newspaper websites were analyzed. The sample was divided into three groups

    based on circulation size. The results show that news and daily life information

    make up the most part of the contents of the websites in general. And while

    the websites of the large-sized papers offer as much contents as general portal

    sites, those of the medium-sized papers put emphasis on local news and information.

    In addition, the small sized-papers’ websites lagged behind the large

    and medium in both contents and technologies in this study.

    Download PDF (1828K)
  • Kunta Wu
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 197-215
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    The purpose of this study is to consider about journalism from Antonio

    Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks. There were some issues that Gramsci’s writings

    were applied in sociology of the mass media, however, a part of which were argued

    within fragmentary viewpoints. Therefore, I have not only examined how

    journalism was directly depicted, but discussed it with the other main themes

    in Prison Notebooks ― “intellectuals”, “party”, “Americanism and Fordism”

    and “philosophy of praxis”. In conclusion, I give three criticisms ― parties as

    press; everyone be a journalist; war of information ― on the further studies.

    Download PDF (1427K)
  • Kawol Chung
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 217-236
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     The purpose of this paper is to historically examine the opinion poll – a

    system which was introduced to Japan – and to provide a multi-layered illustration

    of its viewpoint structure.

      We will first look at the role which opinion polls played in GHQ, and identify

    the positions of multiple polling organizations within the structure. Next, we

    will examine the viewpoints established by sociologists employed by PO&SR,

    and highlight the fact that they relied on applied sociology and acknowledged

    the opinion polls as a social technology. This paper will re-examine the opinion

    poll under the confused ideology of GHQ.

    Download PDF (1425K)
  • Sungmin Kim
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 237-254
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     The purpose of this study is to examine the influences of‘ broadcast spillover

    from Japan’ in Pusan, Korea in the 1950-70s and understand the cultural

    meaning of the historical process. Japanese broadcast by spill-over not only has

    influenced on Korean broadcast system deeply, but also has been enjoyed by

    people as a kind of popular culture in everyday life in the situation that it had

    been banned to import Japanese popular culture. What this study showed was

    that a number of attitudes, gazes, and strategies on political, economical, social

    and cultural levels have been involved complicatedly in this issue.

    Download PDF (1575K)
  • Akihiko Ishido
    2010 Volume 76 Pages 255-273
    Published: January 31, 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: October 06, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

     This paper aims to clarify class-consciousness and its changing process

    appeared in popular newspapers in early modern Japan. The research is based

    on a study of the /Yomiuri Shimbun/, /Tokyo Eiri Shimbun/, /Kanayomi Shimbun/

    and some other newspapers in 1870s.

      Until 1877, in the trend of civilization, writers and contributors of popular

    newspapers had admonished urban people who were mainly comprised of artisans

    and rickshaw drivers. But from mid-1877, as the trend became weaker, the

    media began to consider it unnecessary to admonish them anymore, and started

    to call them“ inferior class”

    Download PDF (1452K)
Symposium Reports
Workshop Reports
Research Group Records(April, 2009 to August, 2009)
feedback
Top