Description: With increasing interest in media power across media policy and the cultural industries, this is a timely revisting of the classic idea of ′media imperialism′. Boyd-Barrett presents a thorough retake for the 21st Century, exploring how structures of power still regulate our access to media.
Brief description: Dr. Oliver Boyd-Barrett joined Bowling Green State University′s School of Communication Studies as Director in 2005, a position he held for three years before deciding to return to faculty in the Department of Journalism. His current research interests include international and national news agencies, news media and the "war on terror," and Hollywood representations of the intelligence community. He was previously Professor of Communication at California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, California, and has held various appointments at universities in the United Kingdom. Dr. Boyd-Barrett has published extensively on educational and management communications, international news media, and the political economy of mass communication. He is founding chair of the division for Global Communication and Social Change in the International Communication Association.
Review Quotes: Boyd-Barrett brings together a remarkably wide array of media experiences and practices from around the planet, and invites us to look closely at their power, viewed on differing levels through the critical lens of 'imperialism'.
--John D.H. Downing (3/11/2014 12:00:00 AM)