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Il faut analyser l'impérialisme des media comme un phénomène à la fois économique, politique et culturel. Les media (y compris les firmes de relations publiques, les organismes de sondage, et surtout l'informatique) font partie intégrale du capitalisme avancé.
Schiller, Herbert I.
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Media and cultural imperialism reconsidered
Chinese Journal of Communication, 2012The theory of media and cultural imperialism is today largely discredited. This article reviews the classical theory, particularly as developed by Schiller and identifies a number of its key elements. The main objections to this view are then briefly rehearsed, and their conclusive force is accepted.
Colin Sparks
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India: Makings of Little Cultural/Media Imperialism?
An efflorescence of the media in India during the 1990s, mainly in television, has revolutionized the South Asian mediascape. After the novelty of foreign channels wore off in the early 1990s, Indian channels consolidated their position, recorded the highest audience ratings and forced foreign channels to adopt local programming in a big way.
Sonwalkar, Prasun
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Globalization, Media Imperialism and South Korean Sport
International Journal of the History of Sport, 2015This study tries to understand South Korean sport through the lens of media globalization. It explains what happened when Chan Ho Park gained fame in the Major League Baseball and how the Korean media sport market has changed since then. Due to the oligopolistic media market structure in Korea, and opportunistic behaviour, the sports media industry in ...
Sunhwan Hwang, Doyeon Won
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Battling against Western Media Imperialism
This chapter analyzes the expansion of Turkey’s English-language communication efforts during the mid-to-late 2010s, against the backdrop of the AKP government’s concerns regarding its negative portrayal in the international media. It elucidates how the government was compelled to rapidly develop new global communication platforms during this period toexaly +2 more sources
Media imperialism in Philippine television
Media Asia, 1981AbstractThe depencence of developing countries on television programmes from the developed countries, especially the United States, stems from a basic demand and supply situation. Limited programming budgets in Third World broadcasting stations have forced broadcasters to import programmes to fill in their time slots.
Orly S. Mercado, Elizabeth B. Buck
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Global Media, Neoliberalism, and Imperialism
Monthly Review, 2001In conventional parlance, the current era in history is generally characterized as one of globalization, technological revolution, and democratization. In all three of these areas media and communication play a central, perhaps even a defining, role.
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Problems of the Phenomenon of Empireness in the Postcolonial Era and Its Expression in Various Forms of Media Imperialism via the Examples of the USA, Japan and Russia [PDF]
The aim of the study is to define the phenomenon of empireness and to define its role in the era of postcolonialism. We consider the forms of empireness in the form of media imperialism in relation to the policies and development trends of the United ...
Yazovskaya, O. +3 more
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