Document details

Cosmopolitan Communications: Cultural Diversity in a Globalized World

New York: Cambridge University Press (2009), xv, 429 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 379-414, index

Series: Communication, Society and Politics

ISBN 978-0-521-73838-5 (pbk); 9780511804557 (ebook)

"We have argued throughout this book that the various versions of the cultural convergence thesis are deeply flawed, whether one has in mind the ‘media imperialism’ argument that was fashionable during the 1970s, the ‘Coca-colonization’ claim that was popular during the 1990s, or contemporary approaches advocating ‘cultural protectionism.’ The convergence thesis rests on the premise that repeated exposure to the ideas and images transmitted by CNN International, MTV, and Hollywood will gradually undermine indigenous values and norms. Consequently, many deeply conservative cultures fear that opening the floodgates to the American or Western media will erode faith in religion, respect for marriage and the family, and deference toward traditional sources of authority. But earlier chapters demonstrated how lack of access to globalized mass communications persists in many poor nations, limiting the diffusion of Western ideas and images. This book has documented the existence of multiple firewalls that prevent the mass media from penetrating parochial societies and thus influencing the culture in these places." (Page 261)
INTRODUCTION
1 Is Cultural Diversity Under Threat? 3
2 Theoretical Framework, 28
I. FIREWALLS
3 Markets, 75
4 Poverty, 98
5 Classifying Societies, 136
II. CONSEQUENCES
6 Citizens: National and Cosmopolitan Identities, 171
7 Consumers: Economic Values, 199
8 Morality: traditional Values, Sexuality, Gender Equality, and Religiosity, 220
9 Activists: Civic Engagement, 236
CONCLUSIONS
10 Cultural Convergence over Time? 261
11 The Implications for Cultural Policies, 287
Technical Appendix A: Concepts and Measures, 311
Technical Appendix B: List of Countries, 318
Technical Appendix C: Methods and Multilevel Regression Models, 322