Este autor profundiza en la intrincada relación entre los medios y la cultura, explorando sus manifestaciones en el cine, la televisión y los nuevos paisajes digitales. Su obra examina críticamente las intersecciones de clase, género y raza, investigando cómo estas construcciones sociales dan forma a nuestra comprensión de la ciudadanía y la teoría política. Con una base en estudios culturales y teoría social, el enfoque del autor se caracteriza por una lente interdisciplinaria rigurosa. A través de extensos roles editoriales y contribuciones académicas, da forma al discurso sobre el trabajo cultural y la política.
This work outlines the theories and approaches to the study of television in an accessible form for students. It is divided into four sections - forms of knowledge, audiences, gender and race. It discusses many television texts including "Star Trek", "Kung Fu" and "Sesame Street".
Offering the first comprehensive and international work on cultural policy, Toby Miller and George Yudice have produced a landmark work in the emerging field of cultural policy. Rigorous in its field of survey and astute in its critical commentary it enables students to gain a global grounding in cultural policy.
Engaging with journalism through the lens of cultural studies, this book explores essential claims about the profession while tackling its most pressing contemporary issues, including critiques of journalistic practices, the quest for objectivity, and the insecurity faced by journalists today.
This book spans an array of contemporary topics and issues not normally
tackled by a single writer – the media, genetic engineering, fast food,
environmental pollution, climate change, economic inequality, political
manipulations, sports, and religion.
"We stand at an epic moment in history, akin to the transformations brought about by plague, slavery, imperialism, colonialism, capitalism, war, decolonization, revolution, emancipation, human and civil rights, feminism, and climate change. The current pandemic brings into sharp relief the fault lines of inequality that divide the world both between and within sovereign states, compelling near universal fear and suffering. COVID-19 is a limit case, an emergency of cosmic proportions that can alert us to the limitations and failings of the current world, specifically in the elemental field of health. How should we reconstruct our societies, environments, cultures, and economies in the anticipated wake of COVID-19 - a world 'after' it? To find an answer, we need to examine the dominant discourse of public policy, healthcare in particular. We need a COVID Charter. This book, written by eminent scholar Toby Miller, focuses on the case studies of the US, Britain, Mexico, and Colombia, on the corporate, scientific, and governmental decision making and the disadvantaged and vulnerable communities in each place, to understand how each country is grappling with the pandemic, but in the background the book also pays heed to what has happened in Asia, Africa, and other parts of Europe, as well as the balance of geopolitical power. Miller intends to call for an end to neoliberalism, specifically market-based health care and a reallocation of resources away from pharmaceutical corporations and insurance companies and toward health as a universal public good. The crisis presented by Covid-19 is taken as a further indictment of neoliberalism as a politically and socially bankrupt form of reasoning. The chapters build up to the COVID Charter and how it can be argued for and implemented. The charter draws on the histories of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, the UN Charter, the African Charter of Human and Peoples' Rights, the ASEAN Charter, and the American Convention on Human Rights and the Earth Charter to emphasize the expansion and deepening of human rights as part of broader action against neoliberalism"-- Provided by publisher
Using discourses from across the conceptual and geographical board, Toby
Miller argues for a different way of understanding violence, one that goes
beyond supposedly universal human traits to focus instead on the specificities
of history, place, and population as explanations for it.