ABSTRACT

Global Media Studies explores the theoretical and methodological threats that are defining global media studies as a discipline.
Emphasizing the connection of globalisation to local culture, this collection considers the diversity of modes of reception, reception contexts, uses of media content, and the performative and creative relationships that audiences develop with and through the media. Through ethnographic case studies from Brazil, Denmark, the UK, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, South Africa, Turkey and the United States, the contributors address such questions as: what links media consumption to a lived global culture; what role cultural tradition plays globally in confronting transnational power; how global elements of mediated messages acquire class; and regional and local characteristics.

part |87 pages

Situating Ethnography in Global Media Studies

chapter |17 pages

The Problem of Textuality in Ethnographic Audience Research

Lessons learned in southeast Turkey

chapter |18 pages

Passing Ethnographies

Rethinking the sites of agency and reflexivity in a mediated word

chapter |18 pages

Audience Letters and Letter-Writers

Constituting the audience for radio in transnational contexts

chapter |17 pages

Rituals in the Modern World

Applying the concept of ritual in media ethnography

part |106 pages

Researching the Local

chapter |16 pages

Negotiation and Position

On the need and difficulty of developing “thicker descriptions”

chapter |22 pages

“Now that you're Going Home, are you Going to Write About the Natives you Studied?”

Telenovela reception, adultery and the dilemmas of ethnographic practice

chapter |18 pages

Methodology as Lived Experience

Rhizomatic ethnography in Hawai'i 1

chapter |19 pages

On the Border

Reflections on ethnography and gender

chapter |29 pages

Radio's Early Arrival in Rural Appalachia

A harbinger of the global society?

part |83 pages

Articulating Globalization through Ethnography

chapter |19 pages

“Ask the West, Will Dinosaurs Come Back?”

Indian audiences/global audience studies

chapter |23 pages

Where the Global Meets the Local

South African youth and their experience of global media

chapter |19 pages

Chasing Echoes

Cultural reconversion, self-representation and mediascapes in Mexico 1

chapter |20 pages

Globalization Avant La Lettre?

Cultural hybridity and media power in Lebanon

part |11 pages

Afterword

chapter |9 pages

Media Ethnography

Local, global, or translocal?