1st Edition

The New Communications Landscape Demystifying Media Globalization

Edited By Anura Goonasekera, Jan Servaes, Georgette Wang Copyright 2000
    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    356 Pages
    by Routledge

    The innovative and rapid growth of communication satellites and computer mediated technologies in the late 1980s and early 1990s, combined with the deregulation of national broadcasting, led many media commentators to assume that the age of national media had been lost. But what has become clear is that, whilst there has been a limited growth in global media, there has been an emergence of a strong localised television and communications industry.
    Mapping the world media market, and using examples of programming from countries as diverse as Thailand, Hong Kong, Brazil, Taiwan, Spain and Britain, this volume explores theories of media globalization, examines the local culture of television programming and analyses the blurring of distinctions between the global and the local.

    1. Introduction Georgette Wang and Jan Servaes 2. Geolinguistic region as global space: the case of Latin America John Sinclair 3. Decentralizing process and proximity television in Europe Miquel de Moragas Spa and Bernat Lopez 4. Local and national cultural industries: is there life after globalization? Georgette Wang, Lin-lin Ku and Chun-chou Liu 5. The global, the local and public sphere Colin Sparks 6. The ambiguity of the 'emerging' public sphere and the Thai media industry Ubonrat Siriyuvasak 7. Constitutional change, media and the national public sphere: the case of Scotland Philip Schlesinger 8. To globalize, regionalize, or localize us, that is the question: Japan's response to media globalization Koichi Iwabuchi 9. Export of culture or co-production of culture? Vignette from the creative process as a global advertising affiliate Beijing Jian Wang 10. Cultural identity in an era of globalization: the structure and content of Taiwanese soap operas 11. Television and global culture: assessing the role of television in globalization Paul S.N. Lee 12. Culture, language and social class in the globalization of television Joseph Straubhaar 13. The choice between local and foreign: Taiwan youths' television behaviour Herng Su and Sheue-yun Chen 14. Convergence assumption and cultural exception: the media industry in the WTO February 1997 agreement perspective Gerard Pogorel 15. No culture is an island: an analysis of media protectionism and media openness Joseph Man Chan 16. Media in the information highway: representing different cultures in the age of global communication Anura Goonasekera 17. Reconciliation between openness and resistance: media globalization and new policies of China's television in the 1990s Junhao Hong 18. Globalization: consumption and identity towards researching nodal points Rico Lie and Jan Servaes

    Biography

    Anura Goonasekera, Jan Servaes, Georgette Wang

    'The Routledge Media Skills series ... offering solid how-to-do-it advice for those embarking on a career in journalism or television ... togetherthey are beginning to form a comprehensive textbook published ininstalments.' Bruce Hamlin, City University, London, in Journalism'The Routledge Media Skills series ... offering solid how-to-do-it advicefor those embarking on a career in journalism or television ... togetherthey are beginning to form a comprehensive textbook published ininstalments.' - Bruce Hamlin, City University, London, in Journalism

    'The growing and important Media Skills stable from Routledge.' - JohnHerbert, Staffordshire University, in Journalism Studies. - John Herbert, Staffordshire University, in Journalism Studies