附註:Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
The cultural imperialism paradigm revisited : origin and evolution / Michael G. Elasmar and Kathryn Bennett -- Impacts of cross-cultural mass media in Iceland, northern Minnesota, and francophone Canada in retrospect / David E. Payne -- Socialization effects of American television on international audiences / Alexis S. Tan, Gerdean Tan and Todd Gibson -- Perceived foreign influence and television viewing in Greece / Thimios Zaharopoulos -- The influence of television and media use on Argentines about perceptions of the United States / Mary Beadle -- Choosing national TV : cultural capital, language, and cultural proximity in Brazil / Joseph Straubhaar -- Cultural proximity on the air in Ecuador : national, regional television outperforms imported U.S. programming / Linda Lee Davis -- A meta-analysis of crossborder effect studies / Michael G. Elasmar and John E. Hunter -- An alternative paradigm for conceptualizing and labeling the process of influence of imported television programs / Michael G. Elasmar -- The impact of international audio-visual media : an expanded research agenda for the future / Michael G. Elasmar.
摘要:For several decades, cultural imperialism has been the dominant paradigm for conceptualizing, labeling, predicting, and explaining the effects of international television. It has been used as an unchallenged premise for numerous essays on the topic of imported television influence, despite the fact that the assumption of strong cultural influence is not necessarily reflected in the body of research that exists within this field of study. In The Impact of International Television: A Paradigm Shift, editor Michael G. Elasmar and his contributors challenge the dominant paradigm of cultural.