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Media History
The Broadcast Archive: Radio history and current industry issues, as well as links and references to other online materials on broadcasting. Special focus is given to US radio history. a good site for radio enthusiasts, researchers, and students find information on the background and history of the radio industry. http://www.oldradio.com/
Early Television: A site devoted to the history of television broadcasting. Hosted by Ohio's Early Television Museum. http://www.earlytelevision.org/
Early Visual History: "A historical window to early vintage visual media and their usage." http://www.visual-media.be/
The History of Canadian Broadcasting: An infobase assembled by the School of Radio and Television Arts at Ryerson Polytechnic University in association with the Canadian Communications Foundation, this site celebrates the history of Canadian electronic communications development. http://www.rcc.ryerson.ca/ccf/ccf_main.html
The International Association for Media and History: is an organization of filmmakers, broadcasters, archivists and scholars dedicated to historical inquiry into film, radio, television, and related media. http://www.iamhist.org/
Journal for Multimedia History: A peer-reviewed electronic journal that presents, evaluates, and disseminates multimedia historical scholarship using "hypertext and multimedia technologies to merge audio, video, graphics, and text into a form that can only be communicated on the World Wide Web (WWW) or on CD-ROM/DVD mediums." http://www.albany.edu/jmmh/
Media History Project: Hosted by the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota, MHP offers extensive timeline, graphics, and short articles abouth the history of mediated communication. http://www.mediahistory.umn.edu/index2.html
Who's Who of Victorian Cinema: This website is a biographical guide to the world of Victorian film. It features 300 biographies of those who, behind and in front of the camera, played a significant part in creating the phenomenon of moving pictures. It is based on the book Who's Who of Victorian Cinema, published by the British Film Institute in 1996. It has been revised throughout, and new entries and background features added, to make the website serve as a reference source to the world of Victorian film and the world as seen through the eyes of the Victorian filmmakers. Victorian film we define as filmmaking in its broadest sense, from the first glimmerings in the 1870s and 80s to the death of Queen Victoria in January 1901. http://www.victorian-cinema.net/