1st Edition
Paul Lazarsfeld and the Origins of Communications Research
The manuscript discusses the early days of communication research, explicitly the first works of Paul Lazarsfeld’s radio and media research in Vienna, Newark, NJ, Princeton and New York during the years between the early 1930s, and the end of the 1940s. Lazarsfeld’s Viennese radio research, especially the world’s first extensive audience research – RAVAG study (1931) – is entirely new information for English speaking scholars. The book shows the details of Lazarsfeld’s methodological reasoning in his projects in the field of communication. The book also presents the research institutes that Lazarsfeld founded in Vienna in 1931, from Newark Center in New Jersey (1935) to Princeton Office of Radio Research in 1937, and up to the foundation of Lazarsfeld’s famous BASR at Columbia University in New York in the 1940s. The monograph shows how important Lazarsfeld’s first studies were for the future development of communication.
Foreword to the English edition
Introduction
1. Contexts of Paul Lazarsfeld’s Communication Studies
1.1. Paul Lazarsfeld’s Life Story
1.2. The Social Context of Lazarsfeld’s Life and Work in Vienna
1.3. Place of Communication’s Research in the Context of Lazarsfeld’s Work
1.4. Paul Lazarsfeld’s Contribution to Communications Studies in Mass Communication Theory and Research Contexts
2. Paul Lazarsfeld’s First 'Communications Studies'
2.1. The early stages of cooperation with Austrian Radio - Psychological Experiments
2.2. Research on Radio-Wein Listeners - Lazarsfeld’s RAVAG Stusy
2.3. Magazines in American Cities - Secondary Analysis of Aggregate Data
3. Princeton’s Years of Radio Research
3.1. The Serach for a Project Director
3.2. The First Research Reports
3.3. Radio and the Printed Page
3.3.1. Analysing and Building Radio Audiences 3.3.2. Radio and Print: Reciprocal Influences
3.4. The Research Moves to Columbia University
4. The Radio Research Yearbooks During World War 2
4.1. Radio Broadcasting for Specific Groups of Listeners
4.2. Music Broadcasting Analysis and Paul Lazarsfeld’s Collaboration with
Theodore Adorno
4.3. Wartime Radio Broadca
Biography
Hynek Jeřábek is a professor of sociology at Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic
"Hynek Jerábek reviews and celebrates Paul Lazarsfeld’s pioneering role in the establishment of empirical social science, particularly in the field of communication. The book dwells on the ingenuity displayed in Lazarsfeld’s earliest work, theoretical and methodological, and on the organizational settings that he created. And, lest we forget, the book reminds us of the intellectual vibrancy of Lazarsfeld’s Vienna." - Professor (emeritus) Elihu Katz, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, and Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
"Paul F. Lazarsfeld belongs to the small group of scientists who are most frequently quoted in international social science journals. What is today called organized social research owes much to his having pioneered the establishing and institutionalization of this type of research in the form of the Columbia University Bureau of Applied Social research and its predecessors. His contributions to the social sciences were of diverse styles and in diverse substantive domains (from mass communication to voting behaviour and from unemployment to the impact of McCarthyanism on American academic life), but, quite evidently, his most influential work in the social sciences has been of methodological nature as many scholars have confirmed. Hynek Jerabek is a scholar well informed about all these topics and he is a devoted Lazarsfeld-researcher. His book opens useful and worthwhile insights on the early days of Paul F. Lazarsfeld´s communication research, including the famous RAVAG-study of 1931 in Vienna, on the founding and development of the diverse research institutes, and on the progress of methodology of social research inspired by Paul F. Lazarsfeld. The text is particularly suited to introduce the interested reader to life and work of Paul F. Lazarsfeld." - Professor Anton Amann, University of Vienna"This book is essential reading