The average rating for Communication: The Handbook based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2013-07-31 00:00:00 Rod Franklin I had to read it for class. |
Review # 2 was written on 2015-08-30 00:00:00 Dimityr Dimitrov Henkin's approach to the post is an important one for histories of communication and cultures of letters (...in the broad, not epistolary, sense): the aim of this book is to outline its cultural impression. The greatest limitation to this book, honestly, is its brevity. Essentially ending, aside from a few references, with 1865, one wonders why more time wasn't spend on the years immediately after the War, during which the post was implicated in the overhauls experienced by the reunited nation. But even within its own time period, one wishes for a few more than 175 pages to help expand the rich field Henkin develops -- what about the postcard, for example? Or more on the urban-rural tension? Or the role of the post in "settling" the West, both for settlers and for Eastern imaginations (the California Gold Rush gets attention, of course, but this San Fran-filtered channel was of course unique)? |
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