Cultural Imperialism and Resistance in Media Theory and Literary Theory - Colleen Roach

January 27, 1998
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1) Subjects:

Cultural Imperialism, Resistance, Total Cultural Package

2) Review:

Cultural Imperialism and Resistance in Media Theory and Literary Theory, Colleen Roach, Media Culture and Society, 1997.

3) Summary:


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This is a survey of theories of resistance to cultural imperialism. Questions are raised about the term resistance.

Cultural Imperialism became a relevant topic in the 1960's with writers Armand Mattelart, Herbert Schiller and Dallas Smythe. Generally they approach their subject with structuralist communications analysis. This was also a time of expansion for the transnational corporation particularly in South East Asia and the Southern Americas. This work resulted in the New World Information and This work resulted in the New World Information and Communications Order which even evolved UNESCO.


The work on cultural imperialism prepared an environment for some interesting ideas:

Active Audience and resistance theories point out that individuals or individuals as members of a group construct their own meaning of media texts. This refutes the basis of culture imperialism yet many of the theorists point out the existence of a dominant ideology.

The concept of the 'total cultural package' is nothing new and is a throwback to the pluralist concept of power. (Schiller, 1993). Also a very interesting thought 'If there is a shadowy zone in critical knowledge, it is definitely that of the procedures of consumption and reception of the media' (Mattelart and Mattelart, 1992). The recent work has also pointed out that 1) the individual, 2) the subject, 3) the plurality of subjects, 4) pleasure and 5) public policy are all significant factors. The measurement of data (or even information traffic) in flow analysis has validated the existence of cultural or media imperialism (Boyd-Barnett and Thussu, 1992). Creolization of a culture is when a indigenous population creates their own media collateral in imitation of the global-styles (Oliveira, 1993). The term resistance has come under the scrutiny of the politically correct movement.

Cultural imperialism and resistance in literary theory supports the notion of the previous media critics from a much larger sample over a broader history. The concept of empire plays an important role in the evolution of globalism or universalism. This is similar to the dominant ideology previously mentioned (Thiong'o, 1993; and Said, 1993).

, 1993).


4) Comments:

Cultural imperialism has always invoked an allergic reaction to me. My response was generally to switch it off. Commercials, soaps, news and lifestyles sicken and bored me. I think Fiske might think that my bourgeois sensibilities were dominating. (What would the bourgeois think?) I found a lack of engagement.

To satirically reconstruct or to analyze a media encounter was a sure way to neutralize some of the negativity. I guess this was resistance.

I'm sure that there are flow analysis studies centered on Canada with data showing Canada to be comparable to any cultural colony of the USA. Unfortunately, the reaction of most would be 'so what'. This is why I think that it is more important to make a Canadian show (message or text) than a successful global show. The catch is that the average Canadian would likely reject it out of habit.

The concept of Polysemy intrigues me. Does consciousness play a part of this? The warning about methodology is well taken since I anticipate this approach. Turning a negative to a positive or even a positive to a negative is a post-modern principle I've taught for years in my design seminars.

The active audience ideas still seem most relevant to me although the effects of dominant ideology and public policy intrigue me.

Finally the 'total cultural package' work seems to support me hypothesis that multimedia should empower the authors to engage and even exploit resistance.


5) References:


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