Globalization, media hegemony, and social class / Lee Artz -- Information technology and transnational networks: a world systems approach / Gerald Sussman -- Without ideology? Rethinking hegemony in the age of transnational media / Patrick D. Murphy -- The "Battle in Seattle": U.S. prestige press framing of resistance to globalization / Tamara Goeddertz and Marwan M. Kraidy -- High tech hegemony: transforming Canada's capital into Silicon Valley North / Vincent Mosco and Patricia Mazepa -- Britain and the economy of ignorance / Arun Kundnani -- "Sábado Gigante (Giant Saturday)" and the cultural homogenization of Spanish-speaking people / Martha I. Chew Sánchez, Janet M. Cramer, and Leonel Prieto -- Television and hegemony in Brazil / Joseph Straubhaar and Antonio La Pastina -- Privatization of radio and media hegemony in Turkey / Ece Algan -- Globalization and the mass media in Africa / Lyombe Eko -- Media hegemony and the commercialization of television in India: implications to social class and development communication / Robbin D. Crabtree and Sheena Malhotra -- MTV Asia: localizing the global media / Stacey K. Sowards -- Political and sociocultrual implications of Hollywood hegemony in the Korean film industry: resistance, assimilation, and articulation / Eungjun Min -- Responses to media globalization in Caribbean popular cultures / W.F Santiago-Valles -- Radical media and globalization -- John Downing.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Shows how dominant commercial media practices secure a hold among and affect diverse national cultures. [publisher].