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The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture
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The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture

The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture

Edited ByToby Miller
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2017
eBook Published 5 December 2014
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780203081846
Pages 558 pages
eBook ISBN 9781136175961
SubjectsHumanities, Language & Literature, Social Sciences
Get Citation

Get Citation

Miller, T. (Ed.). (2017). The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203081846
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract

Research on popular culture is a dynamic, fast-growing domain. In scholarly terms, it cuts across many areas, including communication studies, sociology, history, American studies, anthropology, literature, journalism, folklore, economics, and media and cultural studies. The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture provides an authoritative, up-to-date, intellectually broad, internationally-aware, and conceptually agile guide to the most important aspects of popular culture scholarship.

Specifically, this Companion includes:

  • interdisciplinary models and approaches for analyzing popular culture;
  • wide-ranging case studies;
  • discussions of economic and policy underpinnings;
  • analysis of textual manifestations of popular culture;
  • examinations of political, social, and cultural dynamics; and
  • discussions of emerging issues such as ecological sustainability and labor.

Featuring scholarly voices from across six continents, The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture presents a nuanced and wide-ranging survey of popular culture research.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |10 pages
Introduction: Global Popular Culture
ByTOBY MILLER
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART I Theories
chapter 1|10 pages
Political Economy
ByVINCENT MOSCO
View abstract
chapter 2|13 pages
Theoretically Accounting for Television Formats in the New International Division of Cultural Labour
ByANTHONY QUINN
View abstract
chapter 3|9 pages
Social Semiotics
ByBOB HODGE
View abstract
chapter 4|11 pages
Audiences: The Lived Experience of Popular Culture
ByHELEN WOOD
View abstract
chapter 5|10 pages
The Media and Democratization
ByGRAEME TURNER
View abstract
chapter 6|11 pages
Participation (Un)Limited: Social Media and the Prospects of a Common Culture
ByMARISOL SANDOVAL
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Designing Affective Consumers: Emotion Analysis in Market Research
ByKELLY GATES
View abstract
chapter 8|10 pages
The Metrics, Reloaded
BySHAWN SHIMPACH
View abstract
chapter 9|9 pages
Roland Barthes’s Mythologies: A Breakthrough Contribution to the Study of Mass Culture
ByDANA POLAN
View abstract
chapter 10|7 pages
The Humdrum
ByALEC MCHOUL
View abstract
chapter 11|9 pages
Celebrity
ByJO LITTLER
View abstract
chapter 12|9 pages
Celebrities in Global Development
ByKARIN GWINN WILKINS
View abstract
chapter 13|12 pages
Relationbits: You, Me and the Other
ByANA MARÍA MUNAR AND RICHARD EK
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Studying Change in Popular Culture: A “Middle-Range” Approach
BySTUART CUNNINGHAM, JON SILVER
View abstract
chapter 15|14 pages
Externalism and Linked Brains: Popular Culture as a Knowledge-Creating Deme
ByKnowledge-Creating Deme JOHN HARTLEY
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART II Genres
chapter 16|12 pages
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Dadaism: Popular Culture and the Avant-Garde
BySCOTT MACKENZIE
View abstract
chapter 17|10 pages
Privatization Is the New Black: Quality Television and the Re-Fashioning of the U.S. Prison Industrial Complex
ByMARIA PRAMAGGIORE
View abstract
chapter 18|10 pages
The Money Shot in Feminist Queer and Mainstream Pornographies
ByTIFFANY SOSTAR, REBECCA SULLIVAN
View abstract
chapter 19|22 pages
The Horrors of Slavery and Modes of Representation in Amistad and 12 Years a Slave
ByDOUGLAS KELLNER
View abstract
chapter 20|15 pages
Black Frankenstein and Racial Neoliberialism in Contemporary American Cinema: Reanimating Racial Monsters in Changing Lanes
ByMICHAEL G. LACY
View abstract
chapter 21|15 pages
Nonverbal Signals as Key to Howard Hawks’ Cinema: The Importance of Adaptors in His Girl Friday
ByPAULA REQUEIJO REY
View abstract
chapter 22|9 pages
The Labor of Classical Maternal Melodramas
ByKATHLEEN A. MCHUGH
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
Agitprop Rap? “Ill Manors” and the Impotent Indifference of Social Protest
ByMIGUEL MERA
View abstract
chapter 24|10 pages
World Music: The Fabrication of a Genre
ByTIMOTHY D. TAYLOR
View abstract
chapter 25|9 pages
The Shifting Boundaries of Jazz and/in Popular Culture
BySILVIO WAISBORD
View abstract
chapter 26|7 pages
Body, Space and Authenticity in Shakira’s Video for “My Hips Don’t Lie”
ByANAMARIA TAMAYO DUQUE
View abstract
chapter 27|15 pages
“We Cannot Live in Our Own Neighborhood”: An Approach to the Construction of Intercultural Communication in Television News
ByLEONARDA GARCÍA-JIMÉNEZ, MIQUEL RODRIGO-ALSINA, AND ANTONIO PINEDA
View abstract
chapter 28|10 pages
Online Tabloid Newspapers
ByDAVID ROWE
View abstract
chapter 29|9 pages
Media Representation of Science and Health: The Case of Coma
ByJENNY KITZINGER
View abstract
chapter 30|14 pages
Mass Movement: Popular Culture and the End of the Corset
BySARAH BERRY
View abstract
chapter 31|10 pages
Shirley Temple: Child Star
ByGEOFF LEALAND
View abstract
chapter 32|11 pages
Retro in Contemporary Bombay Cinema
ByRANJANI MAZUMDAR
View abstract
part |2 pages
PART III Places
chapter 33|9 pages
The Personal Is Political: The Political Economy of Noncommercial Radio Broadcasting in the United States
ByROBERT W. MCCHESNEY
View abstract
chapter 34|9 pages
Little Hollywoods: The Cultural Impacts of Runaway Film Production
ByVICKI MAYER
View abstract
chapter 35|10 pages
The Next Ronald Reagan? Celebrity, Social Entrepreneurism, and the Case of Brazilian TV Host Luciano Huck
ByBRUNO CAMPANELLA
View abstract
chapter 36|10 pages
Solidarity Matters: Global Solidarity, Revolution and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America
ByROY KRØVEL
View abstract
chapter 37|9 pages
Performing Native Identities: Human Displays and Indigenous Activism in Marcos’ Philippines
ByTALITHA ESPIRITU
View abstract
chapter 38|10 pages
“Like” It or Not: The Impact of Facebook and Social Networking Sites on Adolescents’ Responses to Peer Influence
ByEW P. CINGEL, ELLEN WARTELLA
View abstract
chapter 39|13 pages
Gallipoli, Tourism and Australian Nationalism
ByJIM MCKAY, BRAD WEST
View abstract
chapter 40|9 pages
‘Creativity Is for People – Art’s for Posh People’: Popular Culture and the UK’s New Labour Government
ByKATE OAKLEY
View abstract
chapter 41|13 pages
The Politics and Possibilities of Media Reform: Lessons from the UK
ByNATALIE FENTON, DES FREEDMAN
View abstract
chapter 42|10 pages
Spaces of Emotions: Technology, Media and Affective Activism
ByINKA SALOVAARA
View abstract
chapter 43|11 pages
Asian Popular Culture Review
ByANTHONY Y. H. FUNG, JOHN NGUYET ERNI, AND FRANCES YANG
View abstract
chapter 44|8 pages
Capitals without Countries: Cairo and Beirut in English
ByJENINE ABBOUSHI
View abstract
chapter 45|10 pages
La Sape: Fashion and Performance
ByDOMINIC THOMAS
View abstract
chapter 46|9 pages
“Popular Culture” in a Changing Brazil
ByEDSON FARIAS AND BIANCA FREIRE-MEDEIROS
View abstract
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