Media and left
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Media and left
(Studies in critical social sciences, v. 72)
Brill, c2015
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The recent economic crisis, and the challenges to democracy in an increasingly globalized world, brings into sharp relief the importance of mass communication. This volume explores a range of issues, from the nature of communication, to the role of the media industry, to the way that mass communication has facilitated social movements in many parts of the world. Revisiting the works of Karl Marx and others, the essays bring a new perspective and a renewed interest in critical analyses of communication practices globally. This collection represents the cutting edge of communication research introducing a new generation of scholars to understanding changes in the way we learn about our society.
Contributors are: Arthur Asa Berger, Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Savas Coban, John Bellamy Foster, Christian Fuchs, Douglas Kellner, Robert W. McChesney, David Miller, Marisol Sandoval, Nick Stevenson, Gerald Sussman, Mandy Troeger, and Michael Wayne.
Table of Contents
List of Tables and Figures
Foreword, Robert W. McChesney
About the Authors
Introduction, Savas Coban
1. The Spectre of Marx, Michael Wayne
The Political Crisis
The Media Crisis
The Economic Crisis
2. Culture, Communication & Ideology = Forms of Work, Christian Fuchs
Introduction
Work/Communication-Dualism: Jurgen Habermas and Klaus Holzkamp on Communication and Work
Raymond Williams' Cultural Materialism
Cultural Production as a Form of Work
Communication as a Form of Work
Ideological Labour and Critical Work
Conclusion
3. Media Power and Class Power: Overplaying Ideology, David Miller
Media Power and Class Power
The Ideological Effect?
Gramsci to the Rescue?
Back to Marx
Democracy
Corporate Power and the Media
Corporate and Class Power Beyond the Media
Conclusion
4. The Cultural Apparatus of Monopoly Capital: An Introduction, John Bellamy Foster and Robert W. McChesney
Brecht, the Frankfurt School, and the Concept of Cultural Apparatus
Mills, Thompson, and Williams
Toward a Wider Political Economy of Communication: The 1960s Critique
The Critique of Culture and the Media in the 1960s
The New Left and Communication: The 1960s and '70s and Today
5. The War Against Democracy in the UK, Nick Stevenson
6. Infamy and Indoctrination in American Media and Politics, Arthur Asa Berger
Practice
Theory
7. U.S. Media and the World, Gerald Sussman
Media and Popular Culture: The U.S. Transnational Power Context
American Media and Internal Colonization
The Future of Capitalist Media
8. The Evolving Business Models of Network News? Oliver Boyd-Barrett
Introduction
Network History
A Question of Complicity
Trends of Change in the New Millennium
Transitioning from Network to Post-Network Age
Conclusion
9. Corporate Social (Ir)Responsibility in Media And Communication Industries, Marisol Sandoval
Introduction
Theories of CSR in Media and Communication Iindustries
Corporate Social (Ir)Responsibility in Media and Communication Companies
Conclusion
10. Media Spectacle and the North African Arab Uprisings: Some Critical Reflections, Douglas Kellner
The Rise and Triumph of Media Spectacle
Guy Debord and the Society of the Spectacle
The North African Arab Uprisings
Sparks in Tunisia
Upheaval in Egypt
Tumult in the Arab World 2011: From the Arab Spring to Bloody, Summer, Fall and Winter
Concluding Comments
11. Turkey's 'War and Peace' The Kurdish Question and the Media, Savas Coban
The Kurdish
Presentation and Perception Internationally
Presentation and Perception in the Turkish Media
The Kurdish Media
Conclusion
Epilogue: 'The Left' as Needed Ideology, Mandy Troeger
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"