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This provocative book takes a new approach toward understanding the uneven flows of global communications. Rather than guiding its discussion by geography, types of media, or traditional separations of power and resistance, Global Communications examines political economic power and communication in relation to historically specific encounters with modernity. It underscores lived experiences in its approach to globalization showing that the state and the market can both be sites of empowerment, just as civil society might also be a site of repression. Taking a political-economic analysis of communication and culture, this dynamic group of international authors looks beyond developments in the North American information and culture industries to map new forms of citizenship and exclusion. The chapters spotlight China, Ghana, India, Japan, Palestine, Russia, Singapore, and Venezuela, and foreground the transnational formations of the European Union, the pan-Arab and Spanish-speaking markets, and civil society actors in sub-Saharan African, the Middle East, and North America. Theoretically driven and empirically grounded, Global Communications defines communication broadly to include production, circulation, and consumption and addresses urgent questions about the inequalities of globalization and the possibilities of hybrid cultural forms and practices.
Auteur
Paula Chakravartty is associate professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She is the author of several articles on the political economy and culture of high-tech development in India, as well as on migration, labor, and nationalism in India and the U.S. She is the coauthor of Globalization and Media Policy and her current research focuses on the politics of info-development and civil society in Brazil and India.
Yuezhi Zhao is professor of communication and Canada Research Chair in the Political Economy of Global Communication at Simon Fraser University, Canada. She is the author of Media, Market, Democracy in China and Communication in China: Political Economy, Power, and Conflict, coauthor of Sustaining Democracy? and coeditor of Democratizing Global Media.
Contenu
Introduction
Part I: The State and Communication Politics in Multiple Modernities
Chapter 1: Neoliberal Strategies, Socialist Legacies: Communication and State Transformation in China
Chapter 2: Media, State, and Responses to Globalization: The Case of Post-Communist Russia
Chapter 3: Regional Crisis, Personal Solutions: The Media's Role in Securing Neoliberal Hegemony in Singapore
Chapter 4: Governance and Legitimacy: The Case of the European Union
Chapter 5: Media, Democracy, and the State in Venezuela's "Bolivarian Revolution"
Part II: Embedded Markets and Cultural Transformations
Chapter 6: Cultures of Empire: Transnational Media Flows and Cultural (Dis)Connections in East Asia
Chapter 7: Local and Global Sites of Power in the Circulation of Ghanaian Adinkra
Chapter 8: A Transcultural Political Economy of the Arab Television Industry
Chapter 9: Rethinking the Spanish-language Media Market in the U.S.
Part III: Civil Society and Multiple Publics
Chapter 10: Gender and Empire: Performing Femininities in the War on Terrorism
Chapter 11: Neoliberalism, Nongovernmental Organizations, and Communication in Sub-Saharan Africa
Chapter 12: Move Over Bangalore, Here Comes . . . Palestine? Western Funding and "Internet Development" in the Shrinking Palestinian State
Chapter 13: Labor in or as Civil Society? Workers and Subaltern Publics in India's Information Economy
References