The Political Economies of Media: The Transformation of the Global Media IndustriesDwayne Winseck, Dal Yong Jin Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 juil. 2011 - 336 pages Some advocates and more than a few critics have misconstrued the political economy of media as a unified field of inquiry. The authors from this volume, by contrast, draw from a more diverse stream of the schools of thought signified by this tradition: Neoclassical Economics, Radical Media Political Economy, Schumpeterian Institutional Political Economy, and the Cultural Industries School. The book as a whole is as alert to developments in our main objects of analysis - media institutions, technologies, markets, uses and society - as it is to changes in the world around us, including current trends in communication and media studies. The contributors show that digital media are disrupting entire media industries, but without erasing the past. Throughout, the impact of the unprecedented wave of media consolidation in the late-1990s and the financial crisis of the past few years loom large. The authors also suggest that there is no 'supra logic' of 'total system integration' that spans the network media, while insisting that one media sector is not the same as the next. Social networking activities often beg, pilfer and borrow 'content' from 'traditional media', but it remains the case that Time Warner, Comcast, the BBC and News Corp. are very different creatures than Apple, Baidu, Facebook or Google. In other words, even in the age of convergence and remix culture, different media continue to display their own distinctive political economies, as the volume's title - The Political Economies of Media - signals. |
Table des matières
From the Singular to the Plural Theorizing the Digital and Networked Media Industries in the TwentyFirst Century | 49 |
The Conquest of Capital or Creative Gales of Destruction? | 121 |
Communication Conventions and Crises | 221 |
Bibliography | 272 |
303 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
advertising argue audience Bank Benkler billion broadcasting cable Canada Canwest capital capitalist chapter Cogeco Cognition Comcast communications companies communications industries competition Comscore concentration convergence countries creative industries crisis critical CRTC CTVglobemedia cultural and informational cultural industries deconvergence democracy discourses Disney distribution diversity economists elite entertainment Facebook Figure film financial media funding global media Google inflation International investment Journal McChesney media and communications media companies media concentration media conglomerates media content media corporations media ecology Media Economics media economy media firms media markets media ownership media sector mergers Miège monetary policy MySpace Naspers NBC-Universal neoliberal newspaper Noam NZ On Air Ofcom operators percent platforms political economy production profits public service Quebecor radio revenue role search engine social networking society strategies structure studies technologies telecommunications telecoms television traditional media trends TVNZ United users Viacom Warner websites workforce YouTube