Mediated Cosmopolitanism: The World of Television News

Couverture
Polity, 2010 - 182 pages
'Most media organizations are cutting budgets for overseas reporting. Yet globalization is making the world ever more interdependent. Robertson's book is a fascinating study of how viewers can "recognize and identify with the distant Others who populate their television screens". It is essential reading for practitioners as well as scholars.'
James Painter, Reuters Institute, University of Oxford

'We live in an increasingly interconnected and precarious global age. Today's media have an incredibly important part to play in recognizing how distant others are not so different from ourselves and in imagining how our world should be. Alexa Robertson's Mediated Cosmopolitanism lucidly and impressively explores the complexities and opportunities involved.'
Simon Cottle, Cardiff University

'Alexa Robertson offers a subtle and nuanced account of television news reporting and its audiences, showing how cosmopolitan sentiments are mediated through televisual storytelling and the popular imagination. A must-read book for all those interested in mass media, culture and politics in an epoch of globalization.'
Robert Holton, Trinity College Dublin

Media power in the global era has to do with how people understand the world, their place in it, and their relation to the others who populate it. Making connections with distant places and people is the work of cosmopolitan imagination, which involves seeing the world through the eyes of others. In this book, Robertson engages with the growing literature on cosmopolitanism to address these issues, combining theoretical debates with an innovative empirical portal. Based on the analysis of over 2000 news reports broadcast on national and global channels and interviews with journalists and audience members, Mediated Cosmopolitanism illustrates that the same everyday stories about the world can take on different meanings in different cultures. It argues that if we are to understand how media actors may help people to make the connections that underpin a cosmopolitan outlook, attention must be paid to evidence that some actors may not, and that national broadcasters could be more active agents of cosmopolitanism than global channels.

Accessibly written, the book will be essential reading for advanced undergraduate and masters students, particularly of media studies, but also of sociology, politics and international relations.

 

Table des matières

Nourishing the Cosmopolitan Imagination
1
Comparing News Coverage to Domestic and Global Publics
30
Journalists Viewers and Imagining How it is to be the Other
50
Television Coverage of the Asian Tsunami
76
Cosmopolitanism Media and Memory
104
Concluding Thoughts
137
Notes
150
References and Bibliography
156
Index
173
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2010)

Alexa Robertson is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Political Science at Stockholm University

Informations bibliographiques