New Patterns in Global Television focuses upon the development of television industries in some of the countries outside the traditionally dominant centres. It challenges the view that `cultural imperialism' from powerful metropolitan centres dictates the supply of television programmes and services in the world. Specialist researchers provide the first comprehensive overview of TV production in dynamic `peripheral' regions such as Latin America, India, the Middle East, Greater China, and, in the English-speaking world, Canada and Australia.
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This book brings together contributions from specialist researchers on the most dynamic of these regions: Latin America, India the Middle East, Greater China, and, in the English-speaking world, Canada and Australia. It provides the first comprehensive overview of the new patterns of flow in international programme exchange and service provision in the satellite era, patterns which were not becoming apparent within the perspective of the prevailing theoretical orthodoxies in international communication research and policy.
John Sinclair is at Victoria University of Technology, Melbourne. Elizabeth Jacka is at University of Technology, Sydney.
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