Marxism And Media Studies: Key Concepts and Contemporary TrendsPluto Press, 20 jul 2003 - 289 pagina's Although media studies is a popular academic discipline, there are remarkably few books that analyse it from a specifically Marxist perspective. Mike Wayne's book is ideal for all students of media studies who are interested in bringing a radical political methodology to bear on their work. He presents an accessible guide to key Marxist concepts and shows how to apply them to contemporary cultural analysis.Drawing on Marx, Lukacs, Gramsci, Habermas, Jameson and other writers, this book provides a comprehensive exposition of the key concepts required for a Marxist analysis of the media and current cultural trends. Retooling and redeeming such concepts as class, mode of production, culture industries, the state, base-superstructure, ideology, hegemony, knowledge and social interests, and commodity fetishism, this book ranges across film, television, the internet and print media. The analysis is carefully grounded in case studies ranging from digital file swapping to Disney, from reality TV show Big Brother to the spirits and spectres in such films as The Others, The Devil's Backbone and Dark City, which illuminate the fetishisms of culture and society under capital.Exploring the relevance of each concept to understanding the media, Wayne explains why Marxism is an important critical methodology for the media student to engage with. He foregrounds the theoretical and political shifts that have led to its marginalisation in recent years, and highlights how and why these trends are changing as once more, people return to Marx and Marxism to understand the world around them. |
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Pagina 252
... critique or critique of the capitalist environment are virtually non - existent . We see the deleterious effects this world has on what little integrity they have , their friendships , self - respect , families , lovers and so forth and ...
... critique or critique of the capitalist environment are virtually non - existent . We see the deleterious effects this world has on what little integrity they have , their friendships , self - respect , families , lovers and so forth and ...
Pagina 255
... critique the relativists . However , like the relativists , he shifts attention away from the referential ' what ' aspects of communica- tion , to the ' how ' , emulating their own anti - mimetic thrust . In doing so Habermas opens up a ...
... critique the relativists . However , like the relativists , he shifts attention away from the referential ' what ' aspects of communica- tion , to the ' how ' , emulating their own anti - mimetic thrust . In doing so Habermas opens up a ...
Pagina 266
... critique of credulous identity - thinking , but he did not fall into the opposite error of simply championing negativity . A high theory concept such as Žižek's notion of the Real , as with an undialectical popular scepticism , rapidly ...
... critique of credulous identity - thinking , but he did not fall into the opposite error of simply championing negativity . A high theory concept such as Žižek's notion of the Real , as with an undialectical popular scepticism , rapidly ...
Inhoudsopgave
Technology and New Media | 38 |
Hollywoods MediaIndustrial Complex | 61 |
Regulating the Impossible | 87 |
Copyright | |
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Marxism and Media Studies: Key Concepts and Contemporary Trends Mike Wayne Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2017 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract advertising analysis appearance-forms argued audience autonomy base-superstructure become Big Brother bourgeois broadcasting capital capital's capitalist mode Chapter cinema commodity fetishism communication companies competition concept concrete conflict consciousness consumer context contradiction corporate crisis critical critique dialectical discourse Disney dominant example film forces of production Fordism global Gramsci Habermas historical Hollywood human labour ideology immanence industry Internet intersubjectivity ITV Digital Jameson knowledge labour power language logic London Lukács Marx Marx's Marxian Marxism material means media policy middle class mode of development mode of production monopoly Napster object organised paradigm particular philosophy post-Fordism postmodern practices Press production process productive forces profit programme public sphere question reality reification relations of production representation repression Saussurean sense signifying signs social relations society strategies structure superstructure surplus value television theory tion use-value workers Žižek