Global
Currents
Price: $22.95
Subtitle: Media and Technology Now
Author: Tasha G. Oren, Patrice Petro
Subject: Communication/Cultural Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3480-1
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3479-8
Pages: 256 pp. 2 b&w illus.
Series: New
Directions in International Studies
View the table of contents for Global Currents
Read an excerpt from Global Currents
Description:
Praise for Global Currents
"The thought-provoking and wide-ranging essays in this
excellent new collection insist that we take both 'media' and
'globalization' as complex, dynamic, and inextricably related
categories. Furthermore, they validate the editors' insistence that the
field of media studies is most profitably organized around
understanding changing and unpredictable relationships among media
forms and the tangled web of institutions, practices, and processes
that constitute 'the media' at the beginning of the twenty-first
century."-Robert C. Allen, coeditor of The Television Studies Reader
"The editors have assembled a truly provocative collection of
essays. This is cutting-edge scholarship at its best."-Timothy
Corrigan, University of Pennsylvania
Rhetoric about media technology tends to fall into two
extreme categories: unequivocal celebration or blanket condemnation.
This is particularly true in debate over the clash of values when first
world media infiltrate third world audiences.
Bringing together the best new work on contemporary media
practices, technologies, and policies, the essayists in Global
Currents argue that neither of these extreme views accurately
represents the role of media technology today. New ways of thinking
about film, television, music, and the Internet demonstrate that it is
not only media technologies that affect the cultures into which they
are introduced-it is just as likely that the receiving culture will
change the media.
Topics covered in the volume include copyright law and
surveillance technology, cyberactivism in the African Diaspora,
transnational monopolies and local television industries, the marketing
and consumption of "global music," "click politics" and the war on
Afghanistan, the techno-politics of distance education, artificial
intelligence and global legal institutions, and traveling and
"squatting" in digital space. Balanced between major theoretical
positions and original field research, the selections address the
political and cultural meanings that surround and configure new
technologies.
Tasha G. Oren is an assistant professor of film and
media studies in the department of English at the University of
Wisconsin, Milwaukee. She is the author of Demon in the Box: Jews,
Arabs, Politics, and Culture in the Making of Israeli Television
and coeditor of Asian American Popular Culture. Patrice
Petro is a professor of film and media studies and director of the
Center for International Education at the University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee. She is the author of Aftershocks of the New: Feminism
and Film History and coeditor of Global Cities: Cinema,
Architecture, and Urbanism in a Digital Age.
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