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Media CapitalTowards the Study of Spatial FlowsUniversity of Wisconsin, USA, mcurtin{at}wisc.edu Prior studies that emphasize a one-way flow of US programming to the periphery of the world system are now being reassessed in light of the increasing volume and velocity of multi-directional media flows that emanate from particular cities, such as Bombay, Cairo, and Hong Kong. These emerging centers of transnational cultural production suggest a need to supplement the current scholarly emphasis on national media systems with a more intensive examination of media capitals. Examining the histories of Hollywood, Hong Kong, and Chicago television, this essay illustrates how scholars might use media capital as a concept that would foster empirically grounded analysis of the temporal dynamism and spatial complexity of the global media environment.
Key Words: Chicago cultural geography culture industries globalization Hollywood Hong Kong media imperialism television
International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 6, No. 2,
202-228 (2003) This article has been cited by other articles:
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