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Talking Back to Globalization: Texts and Practices New edition [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 239 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 480 g
  • Sari: Intersections in Communications and Culture 33
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433129663
  • ISBN-13: 9781433129667
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 239 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 480 g
  • Sari: Intersections in Communications and Culture 33
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433129663
  • ISBN-13: 9781433129667
Teised raamatud teemal:
Globalization is one of the most widely circulated, high-stakes buzzwords of the past generation; yet discussion of the topic is often encased in paradox and contention over what globalization is, to whom and where it may (or may not) apply, and to what effect. In Talking Back to Globalization: Texts and Practices, contributors provide a series of case studies that stress the interplay between culture, politics, and commerce. Interviews with Natalie Fenton and Radha S. Hegde survey globalization and its interpenetration with the spheres of journalism, activism, social media, and identity. The overview furnished by the interviews is followed by the volumes two additional extended sections, «Texts» and «Practices.» Chapters in the «Texts» section seek clues about globalization through its insinuation into mediated forms. The diverse selection of cases cover television, films, online travel web pages, blues music, and the political valences of Portuguese neo-fado. Chapters in the «Practices» section address more diffused cases than media texts. Their analyses largely orient toward institutional concomitants of globalization that precede the subjects experience of it. Chapters cover the trajectory of the European university, campaigns to shape journalistic practice during the Cold War, the posture of intellectuals vis-à-vis globalization, and the ideology that animates the Facebook experience.

Arvustused

«Global what? Global how? Global who? Were all struggling with how to make sense of globalization. Through an agile blend of interview, theorization, and case study, the editors of Talking Back to Globalization have both answered these questions and added a further how to respond, how to contest, how to think otherwise. Bravo!» (Toby Miller, Universidad del Norte, Colombia) «This wide-ranging collection highlights how opportunities for cultural mixing are both bait and consequence of a pervasive social system prioritizing market-driven exchange. The chapters stress the importance not just of talking back but of completely reframing conversations about neoliberal-driven globalization.» (Erika Polson, University of Denver) «Global what? Global how? Global who? Were all struggling with how to make sense of globalization. Through an agile blend of interview, theorization, and case study, the editors of Talking Back to Globalization have both answered these questions and added a further how to respond, how to contest, how to think otherwise. Bravo!» (Toby Miller, Universidad del Norte, Colombia) «This wide-ranging collection highlights how opportunities for cultural mixing are both bait and consequence of a pervasive social system prioritizing market-driven exchange. The chapters stress the importance not just of talking back but of completely reframing conversations about neoliberal-driven globalization.» (Erika Polson, University of Denver)

Introduction: Washed Up on the Shores of Neoliberal Globalization xi
Brian Michael Goss
Joan Pedro-Caranana
Mary Rachel Gould
Section One Interviews
Preface to the Interviews
3(2)
Chapter One A Conversation With Natalie Fenton: "Resocializing the Political and Re-politicizing the Economy"
5(16)
Joan Pedro-Caranana
Natalie Fenton
Chapter Two A Conversation With Radha S. Hegde: Globalization: "It's Everywhere; It's Nowhere"
21(18)
Rae Lynn Schwartz-DuPre
Radha S. Hegde
Section Two Texts
Chapter Three "Petting the Burning Dog" of Orientalism: Implications of Occupation (2009) and Generation Kill (2008) for Cosmopolitan Assumptions About Globalization
39(20)
Brian Michael Goss
Chapter Four Courting the LGBTQ Consumer: A Global Perspective
59(22)
Christopher Chavez
Mary Rachel Gould
Chapter Five The Globalization of Blues: Rural, Urban, Transatlantic
81(24)
Josep Pedro-Caranana
Chapter Six "Ai, e tao bom ser pequenino!": OqueStrada's Fado-Chanson-Ska and Local Sustainable Capitalism
105(24)
Michael Arnold
Section Three Practices
Chapter Seven The Globalization of Universities: European Higher Education Area Viewed From the Perspectives of the Enlightenment and Industrialism
129(24)
Joan Pedro-Caranana
Chapter Eight Strategic Sociability: US-led Journalist Reorientation Programs and Cold War Media Practices
153(18)
Marion Wrenn
Chapter Nine Defending Human Rights in the Twenty-First Century: Where Have All the Intellectuals Gone?
171(22)
Stasa Tkalec
Chapter Ten Facebook's Global Imaginary: The Symbolic Production of the World Through Social Media
193(22)
Delia Dumitrica
Afterword: The Global City and the Uses of the New Multiculture 215(8)
Cameron McCarthy
Contributors 223(6)
Index 229
Brian Michael Goss (PhD, University of Illinois) is Program Director for Communication at Saint Louis Universitys Madrid Campus. His two most recent books are Global Auteurs: Politics in the Films of Almodóvar, von Trier and Winterbottom (Lang, 2009) and Rebooting the Herman and Chomsky Propaganda Model in the Twenty-First Century (Lang, 2013). Mary Rachel Gould (PhD, University of Utah) is Associate Professor of Communication at Saint Louis Universitys Missouri Campus. Her research interests include the study of travel and tourism, documentary studies, digital storytelling, and popular culture. Joan Pedro-Carañana (PhD, Complutense University of Madrid) is Assistant Professor in the Communication Department at Saint Louis Universitys Madrid Campus. His multilingual publications and research interests address the social mediations performed by communication and educational systems and processes.