"Through an ethnography of English and Kannada print news media in Bangalore, this ambitious and innovative new study reveals how the expanding private news culture played a critical role in shaping urban transformation in India, when the allegedly public profession of journalism became both an object and agent of global urbanization. Building on extensive fieldwork carried out with the Times of India group, the largest media house in India, between 2008-2012, Sahana Udupa argues that the class project of the 'global city' news discourse came into striking conflict with the cultural logics of regional language and caste practices." (Publisher description)
Introduction: Urban deadlines - The twin mediations, 1
1 Regimes of desire: The rise of the Times of India, 29
2 Democracy by default, 62
3 The difference machine: Market and field logics of news, 90
4 Kannada Jägate: The sounds and silences of the bhasha media, 126
5 'Journalists are pimps': A triangulated axis of caste, language and politics, 172
Conclusion: Grounding news, grounding the global, 202