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What is happening today in the world of world television? With intense commercialization and more open national markets, along with technological convergence and greater concentration of ownership, the international TV landscape is changing at a bewildering pace and in a host of different ways. Contemporary World Television presents a unique overview of the global issues raised by these transformations in television. It looks at how they have affected the public interest and society across the globe and how the role of television as a nation-builder is experiencing erosion and evolution. The…mehr
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What is happening today in the world of world television? With intense commercialization and more open national markets, along with technological convergence and greater concentration of ownership, the international TV landscape is changing at a bewildering pace and in a host of different ways. Contemporary World Television presents a unique overview of the global issues raised by these transformations in television. It looks at how they have affected the public interest and society across the globe and how the role of television as a nation-builder is experiencing erosion and evolution. The book's host of international expert contributors also examine TV's handling of news, and sexual content and its role in military conflicts. As well, they provide current assessments of how the global trends have diversely affected many different countries, regions, or language communities outside the Anglophone mainstream. Fully illustrated, the book also uses case studies and selected reading guides and thus provides a transparent and accessible but in-depth introduction to central developments, issues, and concerns in contemporary world television.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- 2004 edition
- Seitenzahl: 131
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 245mm x 185mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 422g
- ISBN-13: 9781844570102
- ISBN-10: 184457010X
- Artikelnr.: 21073135
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- 2004 edition
- Seitenzahl: 131
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 245mm x 185mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 422g
- ISBN-13: 9781844570102
- ISBN-10: 184457010X
- Artikelnr.: 21073135
John Sinclair is Professor of International Communication at Victoria University, Australia, the author of Latin American Television: A Global View and co-editor of New Patterns in Global Television: Peripheral Vision . Graeme Turner is Professor of Cultural Studies and the Director for Critical and Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia. He is the co-author of The Australian TV Book (2000).
Preface Acknowledgments Notes on Contributors 1. TELEVISION AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST Television and the Concentration of Ownership ('Old' and 'New' Media: No More Hugs and High Fives)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Television and Democracy: Threats and Opportunities
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Public Service Television: Challenge
Adaptation and Survival
Manuel Alvarado (Surrey Institute of Art and Design
University College
UK) (The Case of New Zealand)
Roger Horrocks (University of Auckland
New Zealand) Sex
Television and Regulation (The Brass Eye Controversy)
Jane Arthurs (University of the West of England
Bristol
UK) Commercialisation of News and Current Affairs
Daniel C. Hallin (University of California
San Diego
USA) (Ethics and Television)
Gay Hawkins (University of New South Wales
Australia) Televising War (September 11)
Andrew Hoskins (University of Wales
UK) 2. TELEVISION AND DEREGULATED GLOBAL MARKETS Globalisation and Regulation
Marc Raboy (University of Montreal
Canada) Globalisation and National Identity (The 2002 World Cup)
John Tomlinson (Nottingham Trent University
UK) Television and Local/Imagined Communities (Giobalisation of Indian TV: Diaspora as Imagined Community)
Daya Kishan Thussu (Goldsmiths
University of London
UK) Limits to Regulation: StarTV in Asia (Global Advertising and Deregulation)
Amos Owen Thomas (Griffith University
Australia) Europe as a Television Market (European Imports/Exports)
Jeanette Steemers (De Montfort University
UK) Global Channels (The Discovery Networks)
John McMurria (New York University
USA) 3. TELEVISION IN THE AGE OF CONVERGENCE Into the Post-broadcast Era
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) (Audience Decline)
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Evolution Not Revolution: The Ecology of Multichannel Television
Alison Preston (University of Stirling
UK) Television and the Internet: Multimedia
Communications
Lelia Green (Edith Cowan University
Australia) (Television News Sites)
P. David Marshall (Northeastern University
USA) Is Television a Distinct Medium? TV and Convergence
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) Television and the Mediation of Reality: The TV Screen as Interface (Reality TV)
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) 4. NATIONAL TELEVISION SYSTEMS Canadian Television
Gaëtan Tremblay (University of Quebec
Canada) Australian Television (Australia's SBS: Multicultural Television)
Terry Flew and Stuart Cunningham (Queensland University of Technology
Australia) Television and the European Union
Ib Bondebjerg (University of Copenhagen
Denmark) (Endemol: Formats and the Future)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) German Television
Rob Burns (University of Warwick
UK) French Television (Canal Plus)
Waddick Doyle (American University of Paris
France) Italian Television (RAI and Mediaset)
Milly Buonanno (University of Florence
Italy) Television in Russia (Russia's NTV: 'News is our profession')
Elena Vartanova (Moscow State University
Russia) Television in Eastern Europe
Monroe E. Price (Yeshiva University
USA) Latin American and Spanish Television (US Spanish-language TV: From Periphery to Centre)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Brazilian and Portuguese Television
Joseph D. Straubhaar (University of Texas
USA) Television in India (Cultural Invasion)
Keval J. Kumar (Symbiosis Institute of Media & Communication
India) Television in Africa
Keyan G. Tomaselli and William Heuva (University of KwaZulu-Natal
South Africa) A changing Television Climate in Southeast Asia (Singapore: Managing Liberalisation)
Eddie C. Y. Kuo (Nanyang Technological University
Singapore) and John E. Keshishoglou (Ithaca College
USA) Television in Japan
Shinichi Saito (Tokyo Woman's Christian University
Japan) Television in Greater China (Phoenix Satellite TV: A Regional Broadcaster)
Joseph Man Chan (Chinese University of Hong Kong) Television in the Arab-speaking World (Al-Jazeera Satellite Channel)
Noureddine Miladi (University of Westminster
UK) Bibliography Index
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Television and Democracy: Threats and Opportunities
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Public Service Television: Challenge
Adaptation and Survival
Manuel Alvarado (Surrey Institute of Art and Design
University College
UK) (The Case of New Zealand)
Roger Horrocks (University of Auckland
New Zealand) Sex
Television and Regulation (The Brass Eye Controversy)
Jane Arthurs (University of the West of England
Bristol
UK) Commercialisation of News and Current Affairs
Daniel C. Hallin (University of California
San Diego
USA) (Ethics and Television)
Gay Hawkins (University of New South Wales
Australia) Televising War (September 11)
Andrew Hoskins (University of Wales
UK) 2. TELEVISION AND DEREGULATED GLOBAL MARKETS Globalisation and Regulation
Marc Raboy (University of Montreal
Canada) Globalisation and National Identity (The 2002 World Cup)
John Tomlinson (Nottingham Trent University
UK) Television and Local/Imagined Communities (Giobalisation of Indian TV: Diaspora as Imagined Community)
Daya Kishan Thussu (Goldsmiths
University of London
UK) Limits to Regulation: StarTV in Asia (Global Advertising and Deregulation)
Amos Owen Thomas (Griffith University
Australia) Europe as a Television Market (European Imports/Exports)
Jeanette Steemers (De Montfort University
UK) Global Channels (The Discovery Networks)
John McMurria (New York University
USA) 3. TELEVISION IN THE AGE OF CONVERGENCE Into the Post-broadcast Era
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) (Audience Decline)
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Evolution Not Revolution: The Ecology of Multichannel Television
Alison Preston (University of Stirling
UK) Television and the Internet: Multimedia
Communications
Lelia Green (Edith Cowan University
Australia) (Television News Sites)
P. David Marshall (Northeastern University
USA) Is Television a Distinct Medium? TV and Convergence
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) Television and the Mediation of Reality: The TV Screen as Interface (Reality TV)
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) 4. NATIONAL TELEVISION SYSTEMS Canadian Television
Gaëtan Tremblay (University of Quebec
Canada) Australian Television (Australia's SBS: Multicultural Television)
Terry Flew and Stuart Cunningham (Queensland University of Technology
Australia) Television and the European Union
Ib Bondebjerg (University of Copenhagen
Denmark) (Endemol: Formats and the Future)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) German Television
Rob Burns (University of Warwick
UK) French Television (Canal Plus)
Waddick Doyle (American University of Paris
France) Italian Television (RAI and Mediaset)
Milly Buonanno (University of Florence
Italy) Television in Russia (Russia's NTV: 'News is our profession')
Elena Vartanova (Moscow State University
Russia) Television in Eastern Europe
Monroe E. Price (Yeshiva University
USA) Latin American and Spanish Television (US Spanish-language TV: From Periphery to Centre)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Brazilian and Portuguese Television
Joseph D. Straubhaar (University of Texas
USA) Television in India (Cultural Invasion)
Keval J. Kumar (Symbiosis Institute of Media & Communication
India) Television in Africa
Keyan G. Tomaselli and William Heuva (University of KwaZulu-Natal
South Africa) A changing Television Climate in Southeast Asia (Singapore: Managing Liberalisation)
Eddie C. Y. Kuo (Nanyang Technological University
Singapore) and John E. Keshishoglou (Ithaca College
USA) Television in Japan
Shinichi Saito (Tokyo Woman's Christian University
Japan) Television in Greater China (Phoenix Satellite TV: A Regional Broadcaster)
Joseph Man Chan (Chinese University of Hong Kong) Television in the Arab-speaking World (Al-Jazeera Satellite Channel)
Noureddine Miladi (University of Westminster
UK) Bibliography Index
Preface Acknowledgments Notes on Contributors 1. TELEVISION AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST Television and the Concentration of Ownership ('Old' and 'New' Media: No More Hugs and High Fives)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Television and Democracy: Threats and Opportunities
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Public Service Television: Challenge
Adaptation and Survival
Manuel Alvarado (Surrey Institute of Art and Design
University College
UK) (The Case of New Zealand)
Roger Horrocks (University of Auckland
New Zealand) Sex
Television and Regulation (The Brass Eye Controversy)
Jane Arthurs (University of the West of England
Bristol
UK) Commercialisation of News and Current Affairs
Daniel C. Hallin (University of California
San Diego
USA) (Ethics and Television)
Gay Hawkins (University of New South Wales
Australia) Televising War (September 11)
Andrew Hoskins (University of Wales
UK) 2. TELEVISION AND DEREGULATED GLOBAL MARKETS Globalisation and Regulation
Marc Raboy (University of Montreal
Canada) Globalisation and National Identity (The 2002 World Cup)
John Tomlinson (Nottingham Trent University
UK) Television and Local/Imagined Communities (Giobalisation of Indian TV: Diaspora as Imagined Community)
Daya Kishan Thussu (Goldsmiths
University of London
UK) Limits to Regulation: StarTV in Asia (Global Advertising and Deregulation)
Amos Owen Thomas (Griffith University
Australia) Europe as a Television Market (European Imports/Exports)
Jeanette Steemers (De Montfort University
UK) Global Channels (The Discovery Networks)
John McMurria (New York University
USA) 3. TELEVISION IN THE AGE OF CONVERGENCE Into the Post-broadcast Era
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) (Audience Decline)
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Evolution Not Revolution: The Ecology of Multichannel Television
Alison Preston (University of Stirling
UK) Television and the Internet: Multimedia
Communications
Lelia Green (Edith Cowan University
Australia) (Television News Sites)
P. David Marshall (Northeastern University
USA) Is Television a Distinct Medium? TV and Convergence
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) Television and the Mediation of Reality: The TV Screen as Interface (Reality TV)
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) 4. NATIONAL TELEVISION SYSTEMS Canadian Television
Gaëtan Tremblay (University of Quebec
Canada) Australian Television (Australia's SBS: Multicultural Television)
Terry Flew and Stuart Cunningham (Queensland University of Technology
Australia) Television and the European Union
Ib Bondebjerg (University of Copenhagen
Denmark) (Endemol: Formats and the Future)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) German Television
Rob Burns (University of Warwick
UK) French Television (Canal Plus)
Waddick Doyle (American University of Paris
France) Italian Television (RAI and Mediaset)
Milly Buonanno (University of Florence
Italy) Television in Russia (Russia's NTV: 'News is our profession')
Elena Vartanova (Moscow State University
Russia) Television in Eastern Europe
Monroe E. Price (Yeshiva University
USA) Latin American and Spanish Television (US Spanish-language TV: From Periphery to Centre)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Brazilian and Portuguese Television
Joseph D. Straubhaar (University of Texas
USA) Television in India (Cultural Invasion)
Keval J. Kumar (Symbiosis Institute of Media & Communication
India) Television in Africa
Keyan G. Tomaselli and William Heuva (University of KwaZulu-Natal
South Africa) A changing Television Climate in Southeast Asia (Singapore: Managing Liberalisation)
Eddie C. Y. Kuo (Nanyang Technological University
Singapore) and John E. Keshishoglou (Ithaca College
USA) Television in Japan
Shinichi Saito (Tokyo Woman's Christian University
Japan) Television in Greater China (Phoenix Satellite TV: A Regional Broadcaster)
Joseph Man Chan (Chinese University of Hong Kong) Television in the Arab-speaking World (Al-Jazeera Satellite Channel)
Noureddine Miladi (University of Westminster
UK) Bibliography Index
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Television and Democracy: Threats and Opportunities
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Public Service Television: Challenge
Adaptation and Survival
Manuel Alvarado (Surrey Institute of Art and Design
University College
UK) (The Case of New Zealand)
Roger Horrocks (University of Auckland
New Zealand) Sex
Television and Regulation (The Brass Eye Controversy)
Jane Arthurs (University of the West of England
Bristol
UK) Commercialisation of News and Current Affairs
Daniel C. Hallin (University of California
San Diego
USA) (Ethics and Television)
Gay Hawkins (University of New South Wales
Australia) Televising War (September 11)
Andrew Hoskins (University of Wales
UK) 2. TELEVISION AND DEREGULATED GLOBAL MARKETS Globalisation and Regulation
Marc Raboy (University of Montreal
Canada) Globalisation and National Identity (The 2002 World Cup)
John Tomlinson (Nottingham Trent University
UK) Television and Local/Imagined Communities (Giobalisation of Indian TV: Diaspora as Imagined Community)
Daya Kishan Thussu (Goldsmiths
University of London
UK) Limits to Regulation: StarTV in Asia (Global Advertising and Deregulation)
Amos Owen Thomas (Griffith University
Australia) Europe as a Television Market (European Imports/Exports)
Jeanette Steemers (De Montfort University
UK) Global Channels (The Discovery Networks)
John McMurria (New York University
USA) 3. TELEVISION IN THE AGE OF CONVERGENCE Into the Post-broadcast Era
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) (Audience Decline)
Graeme Turner (University of Queensland
Australia) Evolution Not Revolution: The Ecology of Multichannel Television
Alison Preston (University of Stirling
UK) Television and the Internet: Multimedia
Communications
Lelia Green (Edith Cowan University
Australia) (Television News Sites)
P. David Marshall (Northeastern University
USA) Is Television a Distinct Medium? TV and Convergence
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) Television and the Mediation of Reality: The TV Screen as Interface (Reality TV)
John T. Caldwell (University of California
Los Angeles
USA) 4. NATIONAL TELEVISION SYSTEMS Canadian Television
Gaëtan Tremblay (University of Quebec
Canada) Australian Television (Australia's SBS: Multicultural Television)
Terry Flew and Stuart Cunningham (Queensland University of Technology
Australia) Television and the European Union
Ib Bondebjerg (University of Copenhagen
Denmark) (Endemol: Formats and the Future)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) German Television
Rob Burns (University of Warwick
UK) French Television (Canal Plus)
Waddick Doyle (American University of Paris
France) Italian Television (RAI and Mediaset)
Milly Buonanno (University of Florence
Italy) Television in Russia (Russia's NTV: 'News is our profession')
Elena Vartanova (Moscow State University
Russia) Television in Eastern Europe
Monroe E. Price (Yeshiva University
USA) Latin American and Spanish Television (US Spanish-language TV: From Periphery to Centre)
John Sinclair (Victoria University
Melbourne
Australia) Brazilian and Portuguese Television
Joseph D. Straubhaar (University of Texas
USA) Television in India (Cultural Invasion)
Keval J. Kumar (Symbiosis Institute of Media & Communication
India) Television in Africa
Keyan G. Tomaselli and William Heuva (University of KwaZulu-Natal
South Africa) A changing Television Climate in Southeast Asia (Singapore: Managing Liberalisation)
Eddie C. Y. Kuo (Nanyang Technological University
Singapore) and John E. Keshishoglou (Ithaca College
USA) Television in Japan
Shinichi Saito (Tokyo Woman's Christian University
Japan) Television in Greater China (Phoenix Satellite TV: A Regional Broadcaster)
Joseph Man Chan (Chinese University of Hong Kong) Television in the Arab-speaking World (Al-Jazeera Satellite Channel)
Noureddine Miladi (University of Westminster
UK) Bibliography Index