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GLOBAL FLOWS OF COMMUNICATION Theoretical Approach 3

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Title: GLOBAL FLOWS OF COMMUNICATION Theoretical Approach 3


1
GLOBAL FLOWS OF COMMUNICATIONTheoretical
Approach 3
  • MEVIT3220/ 4220
  • Media and Globalisation
  • Carol Azungi, 25 November 2007

2
IntroductionThe lecture in a nutshell
  • The 21stC mediascape is characterised by
    multi-vocal, multimedia, multi-dimentional flows
    of information and communication
  • In todays digitally connected globe, flows of
    all kinds of info. Circulate around the world at
    a speed unimaginable even a decade ago
  • A shift from state-centric national views of
    media to one defined by consumer interests and
    transnational marketskey factor in expansion
    acceleration of media flows
  • What does this mean?
  • Explanation of main concepts
  • Counter arguments
  • Theoretical extrapolates
  • Examples from the curriculum

3
Ponder during lecture
  • Has globalisation increased western cultural
    influence or triggered the possibilities of other
    flows?
  • What is the role of media ownership in
    determining the flow of information and
    communication?

4
Introducing some of the Concepts
  • Mapping out the main concepts that have
    characterised global flow of communication
    studies over the past 30 years.
  • Some of the the concepts and arguments developed
    in the 1970s and 1980s still influence current
    debates in global flow/ globalisation.

5
Media Flows
  • Media Flows- concept developed by a series of
    empirical studies in the 1970s and 80s. The
    research claimed the existence of unbalanced,
    unidirectional flows of TV programmes and foreign
    news from the centre to the periphery
    (Kaarle, Nordnstreng Tapio Varis 1974 study TV
    Traffic- A One-Way Street A survey and Analysis
    of the International Flow of Television Programme
    Material. UNESCO

6
Cultural Imperialism
  • Cultural Imperialism- popularised by Jeremy
    Tunstall who described this term as a situation
    in which authentic traditional, local cultureis
    being battered out of existence by the
    indiscrimate dumping of large quantities of slick
    commercial and media products, mainly from the US
    The Media are American Anglo-American Media in
    the World (1977 57).

7
Media Imperialism
  • Media Imperialism-developed within a broader
    analysis of cultural imperialism and dependency
    theories. Oliver Boyd-Barret defined it as the
    process whereby the ownership, structure,
    distribution of content of the media in any one
    country are singly or together subject to
    substantial external pressures from the media
    interests of any other country or countries
    without proportionate reciprocation of influence
    by the country so affected (1977 117)

8
US film imports (1998)
  • Isreal 80
  • India 72
  • Australia 72
  • Germany 69
  • Hong Kong 66
  • Italy 64
  • Japan 60
  • Mexico 59
  • Russia 59
  • France 57
  • Spain 55
  • Ecuador 99.5
  • Barbados 97.8
  • Costa Rica 95.9
  • Gabon 94.5
  • Zimbabwe 90.2
  • Cyprus 88.8
  • Sri Lanka 88.5
  • Syria 86.1
  • Madagascar 84.2
  • Lebanon 83.0

9
Feature film exports (UNESCO)
10
Read about responses
  • EU Media Policies and Structures
  • Television without boarders
  • Support for film industry
  • Challenges
  • Hollywood hegemony
  • Language
  • Nationalism
  • Regionalism

11
Counter Arguments / Concepts
  • Contra-flows - countries once thought as major
    clients of media imperialism such as Mexico,
    Canada, Brazil have successfully exported their
    programmes and personnel into the Centre.
    Mexico (Televisa Group), Brazil (TV Globo),
    Canada (CanWest) now export TV programmes and
    music to the countries all over the world.
  • Regionalism- there is now greater exchange of
    news, TV programmes, print media, music between
    regions, e.g. DSTV (South Africa), Nollywood
    (Nigeria), Bollywood (India), Star TV (Hong
    Kong), Al Jazeera (Qatar), EuroNews (EU).
    Exchange of cultural products has also increased
    in Scandinavia.

12
Counter Arguments / Concepts
  • Localisation - local programmes remain popular
    and attract large audiences. People prefer to
    watch their own locally made programmes.
  • Glocalisation / Hybridity- term popularised by
    British sociologist Roland Robertson in the 1990s
    and later developed by Zygmunt Bauman. This is
    characterised by the global-local interaction, by
    cultural fusion as a result of adaptation of
    Western media genres to suit local cultures and
    languages. For example, US generic models (e.g.
    soaps, sitcoms, action movies) have invited
    domestic imitation based on the countrys
    cultural and social realities.

13
Counter arguments contd...
  • Alternative media
  • community media from the margins to the cutting
    edge
  • Address the digital divide access, voice for the
    voiceless
  • Platform/spaces for civic engagement and
    expression
  • Internal flows of communication (devcom
    endogenous community, local culture, indigenous
    knowledge etc)
  • Internet as alternative media enabling reversal
    of flows (see youtube.com, myspace and other
    people-centric channels, suggestions?)

14
Determinants of reversal of global flows
  • Post-Fordist mode of production
  • New technology (satellite, internet)
  • Changing patterns in geo-politics
  • Deregulation of the media
  • Growth of diasporic communities in the West see
    Indias Zee Tv watched by second generation
    British Asians, Chinese TV channel Phoenix and
    the pan-Arabic entertainment network MBC are
    examples of media representing what may be
    labeled as geo-cultural flows aimed at largely a
    diasporic pop.(Thussu, 2007, 14)

15
Dimensions of Global Flow
  • Another influential study on global flows is one
    developed by Arjun Appadurai in the early 1990s
  • He identified 5 different dimensions of global
    flows
  • Ethnoscapes - landscape of people who constitute
    our shifting world, e.g tourists, immigrants,
    refugees,
  • Technscapes - the fluidity of technology (similar
    to the network society concept)
  • Finascapes- movement of currency markets and
    money, across boundaries
  • Mediascapes - distribution of electronic
    capabilities to produce disseminate news
  • Ideascapes- movement of political ideas and
    images, e.g. freedom rights democracy.

16
Theoretical Approaches influencing international
communication
  • Concerns of the times
  • Emergence of theories of communication parallel
    to socio-economic changes of the IR
  • Communication part of the organic Society where
    each part played a role in the functioning of the
    whole (Road infrastructure, credit system and
    communication-postal, telegram, press) the
    nervous system, channel for the centre to
    propagate its influence to the outermost parts
    (Thussu, 2000, 54).
  • 20th C, theories reflected the political,
    economic, technological developments of the time
    and their impact on the social and cultural
  • The critical theories have also dwelt on the
    patterns of ownership and production in the media
    and communication industries (particularly the
    commodification of communication and its impact
    on inequalities

17
Some of the theoretical approaches
  • Free Flow of Information
  • Modernisation theory
  • Dependency theory
  • Structural imperialism
  • Hegemony
  • Critical theory
  • IS and discourses of globalisation

18
  • Free Flow of Information
  • After the second world war and the establishment
    of a bi-polar world of free market capitalism and
    state socialism, theories of international
    communication flows became part of the new cold
    war discourse
  • The concept Free Flow represented western,
    especially US antipathy to state regulation,
    censorship and the use of media for propaganda by
    its communist opponents
  • The free Flow was a liberal, free market
    discourse that championed rights of media
    propriators to sell where ever and what ever they
    wanted.
  • The free flow therefore served economic and
    political purposes. Here, media organisations of
    rich countries could dissuade other from erecting
    trade barriers to their products or from making
    it difficult to gather news from their
    territories
  • Their arguments drew on premises of democracy,
    FOX, media role as watchdogs and their assumed
    global relevance.
  • For their compatriot businessmen, free flow
    assisted them in advertising and marketing their
    goods in foreign markets through media vehicles
    that championed the western way of life,
    capitalist values and individualism

19
  • Modernisation theory
  • (see Lerner 1958, Schramm, 1964)
  • Complementary to the doctrine of Free FLow was
    the view that international communication, key to
    development in the third world
  • International mass comm could be used to spread
    the message of modernity transfer economic,
    political models of the west to the newly
    independent countries of the south
  • Western ways (power, wealth, skill, rationality
    etc) seem as a stimuli for development and a
    bridge to a wider world
  • Critism
  • Top-down approach
  • Narrow approaches
  • Media are not neutral force (they have economic,
    political, social attachements and political
    power in hands of few)
  • Modern (western) and traditional are not mutually
    exclusive (see Freira 1970)

20
  • Dependency theories
  • Emerged in Latin America in late 1960s early
    1970s in opposition of modernisation theory, need
    for alternative approaches, from the south
  • Cultural imperialism/media imperialism from
    dominance of western cultural products especially
    hollywood (Schiller, 1976)
  • Critism
  • They offer no tangible solutions

21
  • Structural Imperialism (Galtung 1971)
  • Notions of centre and periphery
  • Forwards Castells notions of space of flows i.e.
    harmony of interest between the core of the
    centre nations and the centre in the periphery
    nations (p83)
  • The centre-periphery relationships are maintained
    and reinforced by information flows and
    reproduction of economic activities. These create
    institutional links that serve the interests of
    the dominant groups.

22
  • Hegemony (Gramsci 1891-1937)
  • The role of ideology and state power in the
    capitalist society
  • The dominant social group/nation has the capacity
    to excercise intellectual and moral direction
    over society or others and builds a new system of
    alliances to support its aims-Gramsci-this
    happens when this group excersise control over
    mass media, schools, religion etc
  • The dominant class then coersively imposses its
    will on subodinate classes

23
  • Critical theory (Adono, 1903)
  • Cultural Industries production of culture as a
    commodity by the capitalist societies as enmass
  • This lead to standadization resulting into mass
    culture leading to the deterioration of other
    cultures
  • Forum for propagating capitalism ideologies and
    thinking among recipients
  • These debates have greatly influenced debates of
    thee Global flow of information and communication

24
  • Theories of the IS
  • Innovations in ICTs especially computing and
    their rapid global expansion has led to claims
    that this is an IS
  • Speed, volumes, costs influencing global flows
  • Covergence of telecoms with computing creating
    new infomation and communication flows between
    states, between business and among (ordinary)
    people

25
Cases from the curriculum
  • Miss World Going Deshi Addressing an Indian
    television audience with a global media product
    by Nobert Wildermuth (in Media in a Globalised
    Society ed. By Stig Hjarvard, pp 207-253
  • National Prisms of a Global Media event by
    Chin-Chuan Lee et al (in Mass Media and Society
    ed James Curran et al, pp 320-333
  • The Whole World is Watching Online Surveillance
    of Social Movement Organizations by Sasha
    Costanza-Chock (in Who Owns the Media? Global
    Trends and Local Resistance ed by Pradip Thomas
    et al, pp 271-292)

26
Case Study 1
  • Miss World 1996 in Bangalore
  • http//edition.cnn.com/WORLD/9611/23/miss.world/mi
    ss.world.28sec.mov
  • Controversial tv program Cultural assault Vs
    foreign capital flow, show casing Indian culture
  • Events
  • Four bombs weeks before the contest
  • Calls for boycott
  • Peaceful demonstrations
  • Feminists promise to set themselves on fire
  • 15 Nov-8 days before the show, Kumar Suresh
    committes self-immolation

27
  • Beach wear round (Nov 6-11) moved to Seychelles
  • Miss Personality (Nov 9) moved out of Bangalore
    for security purposes
  • Appeal to High court to ban show (culture and
    heritage)
  • Karnataka Supreme Court asks show to be
    mornitored to ensure conditions are met (alchohol
    and decency, laws of the land etc)-only after an
    affidavit from organisers
  • Final day (Nov 23) 24hour Bangalore bandh
    (general strike by BJP

28
  • Despite the strikes
  • 2.5 billion tv viewers world wide
  • 200million Indians (poll results)
  • 120 countries

29
  • Article explores the following issues
  • Protesters misjudgement and reflections on
    paternistic media consumption
  • Process of hybridisation as part of Indias
    glocalisation efforts
  • Conflicts between the local and the global
  • Ideological fights over the meaning of Indias
    culture (cultural imperialism)
  • Competing visions of national identity
  • Contested representation of gender (the
    traditional Indian woman vs. the modern Indian
    woman).

30
Case Study 2
  • Coverage of the handover by the UK of Hong Kong
    to the Peoples Republic of China in 1997.
  • 1842-1997 marking the end of 150 colonial rule
  • Media spectacle 8000 journalists, 776 media
    organisations and several national ideological
    struggles between east and west, capitalism and
    socialism, democracy and authoritarianism etc

31
  • Western media and national ideologies (fear and
    doubt)
  • US representing itself as the guardians of
    democracy (Tiananmen crackdown, question of Tibet
    and HK seen as a target of abuse and negative
    influence)
  • Britain Imperial nostalgia
  • Australia/Canada significance of HK to china,
    defence of America
  • Japan Economic interests

32
  • Chinese media and national ideologies (chinese
    jingoism)
  • 3 major media giants, common policy, access to
    pro-china HK sources
  • Patriotism, emotions
  • (common ancenstry, family centredness and the
    final process of reunifying Macao and Taiwan)
  • End of 150 years of national humiliation (Deng
    Xiaoping, the paramount leader and ingenious
    author of the one country, 2 systems and how
    chinese heroes beat British imperialists
    villains. Ignore
  • Chinas military-national strength

33
  • Hong Kong media
  • Identified with chinese culture but rejects their
    communist system.
  • Reminiscence of the positive British presence
    especially cultural but not the political
  • Taiwan media
  • Endorse British decolonisation while rejecting
    Chinas nationalism branding it as hegemonic and
    expansionist

34
  • Articles raises the following
  • International news-making (foreign news) still
    determined by domestic and national
    interests.
  • Promotion of national interests in a global
    news story
  • Discursive struggles in international news making
  • What it means to be Chinese - cultural and
    national meanings of identity (global Chinese
    communities)
  • National triumph vs. Western imperialism

35
Case Study 3
  • Social Movements and new communication
    technologies
  • USA Patriot Act 2001 allows
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vglTzekPGLCofeature
    PlayListpE8356527487842BAindex0
  • Expanded wire taps
  • Secret searches
  • Information sharing among agencies
  • Access to voice mail
  • Interception of electronic communication (like
    e-mails)
  • Credit card numbers, Tel. numbers
  • IP addresses
  • Search warrants for emails
  • Access to records of meetings, sessions etc

36
Some examples...
  • US
  • Seattle Protests
  • Palestine.indymedia.org
  • Somalian Internet

37
Consequences
  • Vulnerability to selective prosecution
  • Persistant data
  • Chilling effect
  • Delegitimation of social movements
  • Climate of fear
  • Disruption of work
  • Deterrrence of legitimate political expression
    and activism

38
  • Article raises the following issues
  • Use of internet for broader movement coalition
    building across national boundaries.
  • Multidimensional flow as opposed to one-way
    diffusion of information (social movement
    interaction)
  • US surveillance of social movements organisations
    (Big Brother watching?).
  • New technologies also curtails the SMOs (U,S govt
    uses different kinds of surveillance techniques).

39
Questions for Discussion / Reflection
  • In light of new developments in global and
    national media, is the concept of media
    imperialism still relevant?
  • What forms of glocalisation / Hybridity can
    you perceive in your own country?
  • Despite the reversal of cultural flows from the
    North to the South, why do you think US cultural
    products (TV, Films, books) still dominate?

40
Announcements
  • 8 November Dags lecture on Hollywood and
    Globalization
  • Undelivered term papers should be delivered to
    Sarah today after the lecture
  • Lin Prøitz PhD Defence
  • trial lecture on the 1st of Nov., 1715,
    auditorium 4, Eilert Sundts hus, A.
  • Disputas 2. november 0915 i theologisk
    eksamenssal, domus academica, sentrum
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