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18 The Challenge of Qualitative Content Analysis
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- General Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Studies of Totalitarianism, Propaganda, and the Masses (1936– 1940)
- INTRODUCTION 37
- 1 Exposé. Mass and Propaganda. An Inquiry Into Fascist Propaganda 49
- 2. Totalitarian Propaganda 56
- 3 Abridged Restricted Schema 107
- 4 Schemata 109
- 5 Disposition 113
-
Part 2 The Caligari Complex (1943– 1947)
- INTRODUCTION 127
- 6. The Conquest of Europe on the Screen: The Nazi Newsreel, 1939– 40 135
- 7 The Hitler Image 152
- 8. Below the Surface: Project of a Test Film 155
-
Part 3 Postwar Publics (1948– 1950)
- INTRODUCTION 211
- 9 Re- education Program for the Reich 217
- 10 How and Why the Public Responds to the Propagandist 220
- 11 Popular Advertisements 223
- 12 A Duck Crosses Main Street 233
- 13 National Types as Hollywood Presents Them 238
- 14 Deluge of Pictures 263
-
Part 4 Cold War Tensions (1952– 1958)
- INTRODUCTION 267
- 15. Appeals to the Near and Middle East: Implications of the Communications Studies Along the Soviet Periphery 275
- 16 Attitudes Toward Various Communist Types in Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia 309
- 17 Proposal for a Research Project Designed to Promote the Use of Qualitative Analysis in the Social Sciences 316
- 18 The Challenge of Qualitative Content Analysis 322
- 19 On the Relation of Analysis to the Situational Factors in Case Studies 333
- 20 The Social Research Center on the Campus 350
- Appendix 1: “Report on the Work ‘Totalitarian Propaganda in Germany and Italy’ by Siegfried Kracauer, pp. 1– 106” 391
- Appendix 2 Siegfried Kracauer and the Early Frankfurt School’s Analysis of Fascism as Right- Wing Populism 395
- Bibliography 423
- Sources 431
- Index 435
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- General Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Studies of Totalitarianism, Propaganda, and the Masses (1936– 1940)
- INTRODUCTION 37
- 1 Exposé. Mass and Propaganda. An Inquiry Into Fascist Propaganda 49
- 2. Totalitarian Propaganda 56
- 3 Abridged Restricted Schema 107
- 4 Schemata 109
- 5 Disposition 113
-
Part 2 The Caligari Complex (1943– 1947)
- INTRODUCTION 127
- 6. The Conquest of Europe on the Screen: The Nazi Newsreel, 1939– 40 135
- 7 The Hitler Image 152
- 8. Below the Surface: Project of a Test Film 155
-
Part 3 Postwar Publics (1948– 1950)
- INTRODUCTION 211
- 9 Re- education Program for the Reich 217
- 10 How and Why the Public Responds to the Propagandist 220
- 11 Popular Advertisements 223
- 12 A Duck Crosses Main Street 233
- 13 National Types as Hollywood Presents Them 238
- 14 Deluge of Pictures 263
-
Part 4 Cold War Tensions (1952– 1958)
- INTRODUCTION 267
- 15. Appeals to the Near and Middle East: Implications of the Communications Studies Along the Soviet Periphery 275
- 16 Attitudes Toward Various Communist Types in Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia 309
- 17 Proposal for a Research Project Designed to Promote the Use of Qualitative Analysis in the Social Sciences 316
- 18 The Challenge of Qualitative Content Analysis 322
- 19 On the Relation of Analysis to the Situational Factors in Case Studies 333
- 20 The Social Research Center on the Campus 350
- Appendix 1: “Report on the Work ‘Totalitarian Propaganda in Germany and Italy’ by Siegfried Kracauer, pp. 1– 106” 391
- Appendix 2 Siegfried Kracauer and the Early Frankfurt School’s Analysis of Fascism as Right- Wing Populism 395
- Bibliography 423
- Sources 431
- Index 435