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The Myth of Media Globalization
ISBN: 978-0-7456-3909-3
Paperback
232 pages
April 2007, Polity
US $24.95 Add to Cart

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Other Available Formats: Hardcover
  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • Author Information
  • Introduction
  • 1. Theory – structural transformation of the global public sphere?
  • 1.1 System connectivity
  • 1.2 System change
  • 1.3 System interdependence
  • 2. International reporting – ‘No further than Columbus...’
  • 2.1 The world-view of international reporting
  • 2.2 The global non-dialogue of 11 September 2001
  • 2.3 The Iraq War 2003: war reporting in the far from obsolete nation state
  • 2.4 The myth within the myth: the ‘CNN effect’
  • 3. Satellite television – the renaissance of world regions
  • 3.1 Cross-border media use and the triumph of the monolingual middle classes over cosmopolitan elites
  • 3.2 Global television and the ‘spiral of silence’ afflicting democratisation
  • 3.3 The regionalisation of the media in geo-linguistic areas: ‘Huntington’ on the small screen
  • 3.4 The case of al-Jazeera: an ‘Arab CNN’?
  • 4. Film and programme imports – entertainment culture as the core of media globalisation
  • 4.1 Who’s afraid of Uncle Sam? Relativising American cultural hegemony
  • 4.2 How the globalisation of entertainment culture helps permeable national cultures modernise
  • 5. The Internet – the Information Revolution which came too late for the ‘Third Wave of democratisation’
  • 5.1 The Net as Tower of Babel
  • 5.2 The digital divide
  • 5.3 Virtual cosmopolitanism
  • 5.4 The ‘Zapatista effect’
  • 6. International broadcasting – from national propaganda to global dialogue and back again
  • 6.1 After 11 September: the new war in the ether
  • 6.2 Interdependence gaps and attempts at reform
  • 7. Media and immigration – ethnicity and transculturalism in the media age
  • 7.1 Cultural exiles and bi-culturals: immigrant media use
  • 7.2 A persistent cultural deficit: xenophobia in the age of global media
  • 8. Media policy – why the state continues to play a role
  • 8.1 The ‘New World Information Order’ in the age of globalisation: the rudiments of a pancapitalist vision