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Index
Cover
Halftitle
Title
Copyright
Contents
Notes on contributors
Introduction
Beyond globalization theory
PART 1. Transitional and mixed societies
2. Rethinking media studies: The case of China
3. Media theory after the fall of European communism: Why the old models from East and West won’t do any more
4. Media in South America: Between the rock of the state and the hard place of the market
5. Television, gender, and democratization in the Middle East1
6. Power, profit, corruption, and lies: The Russian media in the 1990s
PART 2. Authoritarian neo-liberal societies
7. Media, political power, and democratization in Mexico
8. Modernization, globalization, and the powerful state: The Korean media
9. State, capital, and media: The case of Taiwan
10. Globalized theories and national controls: The state, the market, and the Malaysian media
PART 3. Authoritarian regulated societies
11. The dual legacy of democracy and authoritarianism: The media and the state in Zimbabwe1
12. Media and power in Egypt
PART 4. Democratic neo-liberal societies
13. Media and power in Japan
14. Media power in the United States
15. Media and the decline of liberal corporatism in Britain
16. De-Westernizing Australia?: Media systems and cultural coordinates
PART 5. Democratic regulated societies
17. Media and power transitions in a small country: Sweden
18. Political complexity and alternative models of journalism: The Italian case
19. South African media, 1994–7: Globalizing via political economy
20. Mediating modernity: Theorizing reception in a non-Western society1
21. Performing a dream and its dissolution: A social history of broadcasting in Israel
22. Squaring the circle?: The reconciliation of economic liberalization and cultural values in French television
Index
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