Local Uses of Global Media
The ways local culture and identity are conceived, constructed,
and transformed in their interaction with mediated culture. Mass mediated
texts and images draw on global media processes and content to contribute
to the reification or transformation of class, gender, ethnic, and national
identity.
Recently posted items
- R. Anderson Sutton. Local, global, or national? Popular
music on Indonesian television. (PDF)
- R. Anderson Sutton. Killing me softly? Love and death
in Korean (and Indonesian) music videos. (HTML)
- R. Anderson Sutton. Popularizing
the indigenous or indigenizing the popular? Television, video, and fusion
music in Indonesia.
(PDF)
- R. Anderson Sutton. Seni Reformasi? Performance live
and mediated in post-Suharto Indonesia. (PDF)
- Hemant Shah."Portable culture" and diasporic
identities: Globalization, mass media, and the Asian community in Uganda.
(PDF)
- Shanti Kumar. Planet TV. Introduction (with Lisa Parks)
and Is anything called global television studies? (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Sweet comrades: Historical identities
and popular culture. Chapter 15 in Chou and McIntyre (Eds.) In search
of boundaries. (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Connections and differences: Spatial
dimensions of television history. Film & History, 30. 50-61.
(PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Feminine desire in the age of satellite
television. Journal of Communication, 55-70. (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Globalisation. (Book chapter.) (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Images of trust, economies of suspicion:
Hong Kong Media after 1997. Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television,
18, 281-294. (PDF)
- Shanti Kumar and Michael Curtin. "Made in India":
In between music television and patriarchy. Television & New Media,
3, 345-366. (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Feminine desire in the age of satellite
television. Journal
of Communication, 55-70. (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Induustry on fire: The cultural economy
of Hong Kong media. Post Script, 19, 28-51. (PDF)
- Michael Curtin. Media capitals: Cultural geographies of global TV. In
Olsson and Spigel (Eds.) The persistence of television: Critical approaches
to television studies. (PDF)
- Christopher Anderson and Michael Curtin. Mapping the ethereal city: Chicago
television, the FCC, and the politics of place. Quarterly Review of
Film & Video, 16, 289-305. (PDF)
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Themes
Deterritorialization of Culture
| Cultural Translation
Meaning Production | Local
Uses of Global Media
Discourses of Control | Contexts
of Expression
Modes of Expression
Participants
Ksenija Bilbija | Peggy
Choy | Michael Curtin
Albert Gunther | Shanti
Kumar | Tomislav Longinovic
Hemant Shah | R.
Anderson Sutton
The MPI Research Circle is sponsored by
The UW-Madison International
Institute