1st Edition

The Transformation of the Media Globalisation, Morality and Ethics

By Nicholas Stevenson Copyright 1999
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    The changing pattern of contemporary media is one of the most striking and important transformations of our age. This major new work seeks to understand the implications of a series of mediated processes in relation to public cultures and modern identities. In The Transformation of the Media the author leads the reader through a number of complex theoretical issues, connecting the nature of modern communication to the affects this has on our common moral and ethical lives. Most significantly, he argues that a number of perspectives as diverse as Marxism, post-modernism, liberalism, communitarianism and technological determinism can all be found wanting in this regard.

    The Transformation of the Media attempts to situate the media, and more theoretical concerns, within a broad sociological framework. The volume adds to our shared understanding of the media's relation to contemporary cultural transformations including globalisation, the development of informational capitalism, the changing nature of the public sphere and the impact of new social movements. More specifically, through a discussion of the 'new media order' and the Rwandan genocide a critical prism is held up to existing debates concerning the globalisation of the media.

    Key features:

    • an extremely topical and accessible analysis of the media's implications for
    • contemporary cultural transformations
    • combines a theoretical and empirical approach
    • presents complex theoretical ideas in an accessible way

    This book will be essential reading for students studying globalisation, the global media, new media technology, identity and cultural development in cultural studies, media studies, and sociology and politics courses.

    Introduction  1.Media, morality and modernity  2. Global media and technological change; social justice, recognition and meaningfulness of everyday life  3. Cultural citizenship  4. Global media cultures: contours in village life, hybridity or imperialist dominance?  5. Post-colonialism and mediated violence: the Rwandan Genocide  6. Media politics and the politics of the media: questions of critique and ambivalence

    Biography

    Nick Stevenson is a Lecturer in the Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield.