"An archival treasure and a lively read....Boyle writes with both compassion and crystal-clear insight. This revolution was not about just technology...it was also about people....Boyle has caught this all beautifully."--Choice
"A fascinating and sometimes amusing history of the early video pioneers that offers astute analysis of why their utopian dreams were doomed to fail....Boyle's talents as a media historian stem from her ability to blend rich detail with a broader social, economic, and policy context....Everyone who cares about the politics of television will find Subject to Change a gripping and relevant lesson from the past."--The Independent
"Guerrilla television was a brief, remarkable phenomenon. In its carefully-documented attention to detail, Subject to Change is an important addition to our understanding of a period of social ferment, and of the history of television."--Pat Aufderheide, Women's Review of Books
"In the 1970s, during the astonishing rise of vid
"An archival treasure and a lively read....Boyle writes with both compassion and crystal-clear insight. This revolution was not about just technology...it was also about people....Boyle has caught this all beautifully."--Choice
"A fascinating and sometimes amusing history of the early video pioneers that offers astute analysis of why their utopian dreams were doomed to fail....Boyle's talents as a media historian stem from her ability to blend rich detail with a broader social, economic, and policy context....Everyone who cares about the politics of television will find Subject to Change a gripping and relevant lesson from the past."--The Independent
"Guerrilla television was a brief, remarkable phenomenon. In its carefully-documented attention to detail, Subject to Change is an important addition to our understanding of a period of social ferment, and of the history of television."--Pat Aufderheide, Women's Review of Books
"In the 1970s, during the astonishing rise of video as an independent medium of expression, Deirdre Boyle was there as a gung-ho participant. In the 1990s she is still there, now as a clear-eyed, amazingly meticulous chronicler of a turbulent period of media history."--Erik Barnouw, author, Media Marathon
Subject to Change is destined to change the subject of documentary history. Boyle astutely navigates the virtually unmined, volatile territory of guerrilla television: new technologies, media collectives, organizational in-fighting, funding struggles, network deals, the counterculture, the new left, cable access, budgets, community media, actual productions, editing debates, and the cast of major and minor players. textual and social analysis ofguerrilla video. Her book unfolds a riveting story of the paradox of hope and pessimism latent in all new technologies."--Patricia R. Zimmermann, author, Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film
"An archival treasure and a lively read....Boyle writes with both compassion and crystal-clear insight. This revolution was not about just technology...it was also about people....Boyle has caught this all beautifully."--Choice
"A fascinating and sometimes amusing history of the early video pioneers that offers astute analysis of why their utopian dreams were doomed to fail....Boyle's talents as a media historian stem from her ability to blend rich detail with a broader social, economic, and policy context....Everyone who
cares about the politics of television will find Subject to Change a gripping and relevant lesson from the past."--The Independent
"Guerrilla television was a brief, remarkable phenomenon. In its carefully-documented attention to detail, Subject to Change is an important addition to our understanding of a period of social ferment, and of the history of television."--Pat Aufderheide, Women's Review of Books
"In the 1970s, during the astonishing rise of video as an independent medium of expression, Deirdre Boyle was there as a gung-ho participant. In the 1990s she is still there, now as a clear-eyed, amazingly meticulous chronicler of a turbulent period of media history."--Erik Barnouw, author, Media
Marathon
Subject to Change is destined to change the subject of documentary history. Boyle astutely navigates the virtually unmined, volatile territory of guerrilla television: new technologies, media collectives, organizational in-fighting, funding struggles, network deals, the counterculture, the new left,
cable access, budgets, community media, actual productions, editing debates, and the cast ofmajor and minor players. textual and social analysis of guerrilla video. Her book unfolds a riveting story of the paradox of hope and pessimism latent in all new technologies."--Patricia R. Zimmermann,
author, Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film
"An archival treasure and a lively read....Boyle writes with both compassion and crystal-clear insight. This revolution was not about just technology...it was also about people....Boyle has caught this all beautifully."--Choice
"A fascinating and sometimes amusing history of the early video pioneers that offers astute analysis of why their utopian dreams were doomed to fail....Boyle's talents as a media historian stem from her ability to blend rich detail with a broader social, economic, and policy context....Everyone who
cares about the politics of television will find Subject to Change a gripping and relevant lesson from the past."--The Independent
"Guerrilla television was a brief, remarkable phenomenon. In its carefully-documented attention to detail, Subject to Change is an important addition to our understanding of a period of social ferment, and of the history of television."--Pat Aufderheide, Women's Review of Books
"In the 1970s, during the astonishing rise of video as an independent medium of expression, Deirdre Boyle was there as a gung-ho participant. In the 1990s she is still there, now as a clear-eyed, amazingly meticulous chronicler of a turbulent period of media history."--Erik Barnouw, author, Media
Marathon
Subject to Change is destined to change the subject of documentary history. Boyle astutely navigates the virtually unmined, volatile territory of guerrilla television: new technologies, media collectives, organizational in-fighting, funding struggles, network deals, the counterculture, the new left,
cable access, budgets, community media, actual productions, editing debates, and the cast of major and minor players. textual and socialanalysis of guerrilla video. Her book unfolds a riveting story of the paradox of hope and pessimism latent in all new technologies."--Patricia R. Zimmermann,
author, Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film