1. Mark Poster, Foucault, Marxism and History: Mode of Production vs. Mode of Information (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1984), 164.
2. Mark Poster, The Mode of Information: Poststructuralism and Social Context (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press) 1990. 16–17.
3. Jeremy D. Popkin and Jack R. Censer, “Lessons from a Symposium,” in Media and Revolution, ed. Jeremy D. Popkin (Lexington: The Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1995), 2.
4. The common definition is: “Illegal and subversive mass communication utilizing the press and broadcasting to overthrow a government or wrest control from alien rulers.” William A. Hachten and Harva Hachten, The World News Prism: Changing Media of International Communication, 3rd ed. (Ames: Iowa State Univ. Press, 1992), 27.
5. I filed from Chiapas daily from January 3 to January 14, 1994, with most of those articles appearing on page Al of the Los Angeles Times. Later articles included “Chiapas Revolt Puts Mexico’s Economic Future on Hold,” January 25, 1994, A1; “Mexico Accused of Human Rights Abuses During Revolt,” January 25, 1994, A5; “Poverty, Fear Abide in Area of Recent Mexican Uprising,” February 16, 1994, A1; “Rebel or Pacifist—Mexican Uprising Divides Villagers,” February 27, 1994, A1; “Mexico Reaches Pact With Rebels,” March 3, 1994, A1; “Mexican Rebels Prove Masters at Public Relations,” March 5, 1994, A3; “Zedillo Confronts Chiapas Rebels Today,” December 18, 1994, A6; “Mexican Troops Deployed in Bid to Crush Rebels,” February 11, 1995, A1.