Tube of Plenty
The Evolution of American Television
Second Revised Edition
Erik Barnouw
Reviews and Awards
"On of the better texts on the history of TV. The writing is emotive and well informed. Students read this text with interest and many comment on its excellence."--William Prior, Ramapo College
"Tube of Plenty has established itself as a book that every student of communications must read. It is also a book that every American citizen should read."--David Marc, Annenberg School of Communication, University of Southern California
Praise for previous editions:
"A major achievement."--The Philadelphia Inquirer
"By condensing his scholarly three-volume History of Broadcasting in the United States into a revised and updated paperback...Barnouw has produced an authoritative, well-informed, and highly readable account of the growth and present status of radio and television."--Backstage
"A master of the on-point anecdote, Barnouw has provided us with an eminently readable guide to the forces and personalities, both on and off the air, that developed this nation's system of broadcasting. It is well worth turning off the set for three hours to read."--Fred Friendly, former President, CBS News
"One of the most complete works on [television], a true history in the exact meaning of the word, thorough, and remarkably up-to-date."--Film Library Quarterly
"Still the finest, most readable history of early TV we have."--Richard Gross, University of Wyoming
"An excellent historical introduction to television's emergence in modern American life and culture. Useful for the undergraduate student interested in media/culture studies."--Mark Kosinski, Bradford College
"The best single-volume history of radio and TV in this country."--The New York Times Book Review
"The best single-volume history of television ever written."--Nathan Angell, Brown University
"Barnouw's classic on the evolution of American television is a book worthy of n encore. In Tube, Barnouw achieves the most challenging of feats for a writer--he ennobles without pontificating. And he is as welcoming to the uninitiated as he is respectful of the well informed....With graceful and insightful storytelling, Barnouw also vividly illustrates how the medium's maturation has been intertwined with the course of American history. It's a brilliant stroke....With masterly elegance he crafts a compelling narrative tht simultaneously documents and evaluates television's past and gives us a framework for engaging the future. Understandably, every scholar examining TV history cites Erik Barnouw."--Television Quarterly
"A condensation of much of the material in his monumental three-volume History of Broadcasting in the United States....Tube of Plenty is ideal for undergraduate reading....His is solid libertarian history based on careful reading of primary sources, years of work in the Library of Congress Motion Picture, Broadcast, and Sound Division, and enormous skill in synthesizing huge amounts of material....Barnouw devotes a lot of space to the notion of White House news management. Just the chronology of that issue alone would make an important unit for an undergraduate history class."--American Journalism
"The best general history of television available. An integrated social-institutional-content history. It doesn't fall into the traps of simplistic technological determination, nor does it ignore the importance of the industrial organization and development of the medium."--Michael Griffin, University of Minnesota
"Lively, detailed and briskly written, this panoramic survey is the best I know. Accessible to undergraduates as well as more advanced students."--Stuart Liebman, Queens College, CUNY
"Excellent."--Raymond Foery, Quinnipioc College