Notes
1 See Forment, Democracy in Latin America, 1760-1900: Volume 1, Civic Selfhood and Public Life in Mexico and Peru.
2 Sinclair, The brass check: A study of American journalism.
3 Lippmann, Public opinion.
4 Schudson, Public spheres, imagined communities, and the underdeveloped historical understanding of journalism. Explorations in Communication and History.
5 Conboy, Journalism: a critical history, 2004; Chapman and Nuttall, Journalism today: A themed history, 2011; Ward, “Global journalism ethics: Widening the conceptual base,” 137149.
6 Lugo-Ocando, “Pasquali y las limitaciones del idioma: La Escuela Latinoamericana de Comunicación y la difusión del conocimiento propio,” 105–112.
7 Park and Curran, De-westernizing media studies; Wasserman and Beer, “Towards de-westernizing journalism studies,” 428–438.
8 Waisbord, “United and fragmented: Communication and media studies in Latin America,” 55–77; Waisbord and Mellado, “De-westernizing Communication Studies: A Reassessment,” 361–372.