![]() ![]() ![]() MyungJin Park is Professor of Communications at Seoul National University, Korea.Ĭommunication and Society Series Editor: James Curran Professor of Communications, Goldsmiths College, University of London Glasnost, Perestroika and the Soviet Media Brian McNair Pluralism, Politics and the Marketplace The regulation of German broadcasting Vincent Porter and Suzanne Hasselbach Potboilers Methods, concepts and case studies in popular fiction Jerry Palmer Communication and Citizenship Journalism and the public sphere Edited by Peter Dahlgren and Colin Sparks Seeing and Believing The influence of television Greg Philo Critical Commmunication Studies Communication, history and theory in America Hanno Hardt Media Moguls Jeremy Tunstall and Michael Palmer Fields in Vision Television sport and cultural transformation Garry Whannel Getting the Message News, truth and power The Glasgow Media Group Advertising, the Uneasy Persuasion Its duboius impact on American society Michael Schudson Nation, Culture, Text Australian cultural and media studies Edited by Graeme Turner Television Producers Jeremy Tunstall News and Journalism in the UKĪ textbook, third edition Brian McNair Media Cultures Reappraising transnational media Edited by Michael Stormand and Kim Christian Schroder What News? The market, politics and the local press Bob Franklin and David Murphy In Garageland Rock, youth and modernity Johan Fornäs, Ulf Lindberg and Ove Sernhede The Crisis of Public Communication Jay G.Blumler and Michael Gurevitch Glasgow Media Group Reader, Volume 1 News Content, Language and Visuals Edited by John Eldridge Glasgow Media Group Reader, Volume 2 Industry, economy, war and politics Edited by Greg Philo The Global Jukebox The international music industry Robert Burnett Inside Prime Time Todd Gitlin Talk on Television Audience participation and public debate Sonia Livingstone and Peter Lunt An Introduction to Political Communication Second edition Brian McNair Media Effects and Beyond Culture, socialization and lifestyles Edited by Karl Erik Rosengren We Keep America on Top of the World Television journalism and the public sphere Daniel C.Hallin A Journalism Reader Edited by Michael Bromley and Tom O’Malley James Curran is Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths College, University of London. Contributors: Hussein Amin, W.Lance Bennett, Stuart Cunningham, James Curran, Peter Dahlgren, Terry Flew, Daniel C.Hallin, Chang-Nam Kim, Raymond Kuhn, Tawana Kupe, Chin-Chuan Lee, Colin Leys, Tamar Liebes, Eric Kit-wai Ma, Brian McNair, Paolo Mancini, Zaharom Nain, James Napoli, Myung-Jin Park, Arvind Rajagopal, Helge Rønning, Byung-Woo Sohn, Colin Sparks, Annabelle Sreberny, Mitsunobu Sugiyama, Keyan G.Tomaselli, Silvio Waisbord. Above all, it provides a comprehensive and challenging response to a key debate of our time: whether globalization is a force for bad, undermining democracy, imposing cultural uniformity and weakening popular movements based on organized labor, or a force for good, empowering minorities and promoting solidarity between people. De-Westernizing Media Studies is essential reading because it draws upon the experience of countries throughout the world instead of generalizing from the experiences of a few rich nations in the West. The nation continues to be dominant in contrast to cultural theories which celebrate the rise of the “global/local.” Western “cultural imperialism” can be progressive when Hollywood feminism challenges third world patriarchy. ![]() Free markets can give rise not to consumer freedom but to new systems of power in which big business, media and state are closely allied. Their conclusions challenge the prevailing wisdom, on both left and right. How do the media connect to power in society? Who and what influence the media? What is the nature of media power? How is globalization changing media and society? In a series of case studies from Asia, Africa, North and South America, Europe, the Middle East and Australia, the contributors explore relationships between media, power and society. De-Westernizing Media Studies brings together leading media critics from around the world to address central questions in the study of the media. ![]()
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