Download Lecture V: Globalization and Communication

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Philosophy of history wikipedia , lookup

Origins of society wikipedia , lookup

Technological determinism wikipedia , lookup

Globalization wikipedia , lookup

Proto-globalization wikipedia , lookup

Contemporary history wikipedia , lookup

20th century wikipedia , lookup

Archaic globalization wikipedia , lookup

History of globalization wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Lecture V
The Role of Communications for
Globalization and
Cosmopolitansim
Johan Lindell, Ph. D Student
[email protected]
Media and Communication Studies
Karlstad University
Info
 Take-home exam:
Posted tomorrow night on Kurstorget
Deadline is 12.00 AM, Wednesday, 17th of Feburary
Hand-in – do not mail.
 Wednesday:
Starts 10.15
Jochen Hoffman will visit
Division into 8 groups for presentations
Important information on the individual essays
”Kommunikation och Globala Medier” – students. Jakob
Svensson will visit 11.45 on Wednesday to inform you on
your essays and the course evaluation
 Monday 15/2 Open Lecture. Guest lecturer from
communication agency. All MKV students invited.
Lecture outline
1.) Technological determinism
2.) Globalization and Communication
3.) The Expressions of Globalization
1.) Technological Determinism
Technological Determinism:
 A philosophical standpoint emphasizing the
impact of technology upon societies
 Technology determine societies (social structures
and cultural values)
 E.g. global communication infrastructure ->
notions of humanity united
Raises questions on what role technology
plays in shaping society and culture
How does a technology impact upon society?
What drives history – human agency vs. technology
Common myths/discourses on technological
impact on societies:
The technological deterministic
discourse1.
The printing press
(Gutenberg, 15th
century) ->
- Emergence of the
’imagined community
- Formation of nationstates
- Democratization of
religion -> reformation
- Emphasis on
vernacular
The technological deterministic
discourse 2.
Computer mediated
communcation (cmc) ->
-
Re-invention of direct
democracy (’eparticipation’)
-
Revolutions in education
-
Completely new ways of
thinking
-
Knowledge-society
-
No social classes
Control. History.
What makes history progress?
Man or Machine?
Human agency vs. technology
’Middle-ways’

Smith, M. R & Marx, L (1994), MacKenzie, D & Wajcman, J (1999):
- Common discourses : ”the automobile created suburbia”, ”the
printing press led to the reformation”.
- Before and after – perspective is fallacious.
- ’Hard’- vs. ’soft’ determinism

Innis, H (1950, 1951):
- Communication media (technology) as resources to help/promote
human agency that in turn ’bounces back’ as societal effect.

Castells, M (1996)
- ”technology does not determine society. Nor does society script the
course of technological change. Technology is society”
- Role of the state

Mosco, V (2006).
- New technologies enter society, myths of great change/improvement
are created around these new technologies. The same political
economy dynamics remain.
2. Globalization and Communication
Defining Globalization
The uprooting of human activities – political,
cultural, economic, social
or:
interconnectedness -> interdependencies of
many different parts in the world.
From a communication studies perspective:
Why globalization? – because it is possible to
communicate on a global scale
”Only in the past couple of centuries, as every
human community has gradually been
drawn into a single web of trade and a
global network of information, have we
come to a point where each of us can
realistically imagine contacting any other of
our six billion conspecifics and sending that
person something worth having: a radio, an
antibiotic, a good idea.”
(Appiah, 2006: x)
Tracing the History of the
Globalization of Communication
 Thompson, J. (1995). Media and Modernity – ch. 5
’The Globalization of Communication’
Main points:
-
Today communication is increasingly global
-
This promotes a ’reordering’ of time and space
-
This in turn, promotes global interconnections
interdependencies = globalization.
-
Globalization is a progress, not an end state. Started
mainly with three processes during the 19th century:
Tracing the History of the
Globalization of Communication
1.) 1830’s. The telegraph – electric communication via
transatlantic underwater cables. No more messengers.
1843 – Washington and Baltimore connected
1865 – Britain and India connected
1870s – Europe linked to large parts of the world
1924 – King George V sends a message to himself that
circulated the globe in 80 seconds
2.) 19th century. Emergence of global news networks. Significant in
three ways
1.) News over large territories
2.) Global in scope
3.) Reached big audiences
3.) Electro-magnetic waves. The emergence of organziations with
the mission to dissiminate radio frequencies.
Different globalization[s]
– The dimensions of globaliation
 Cultural: ’Global images’, global audiences, value-spreading,
’neo-imperialism’/’media imperialism’. World culture.
 Social: Global social relations, mobility, tourism, sense global of
community.
 Political: Supra-national organizations: UN, WTO etc. Supra-
national governance: ’world-police’, Obama phenomenon,
regionalization: EU. Cosmopolitansim
 Economic: Common discourse. Trade links, instant money
transaction - global business. Global exploitation of labour.
------------
Common thread: they all depend on global communication
infrastructure.
Conceptualizing globalization
 Appadurai, A. (1996). ’Scapes’ that capture the
globalization of all human activity: ethnoscapes,
financescapes, mediascapes, technospaces etc.
 Castells, M. (1996). In globalization – new logic of
space: from ’space of place’ to ’space of flows’
’Flows’ (= purposeful, repetivite, programmable
sequences of exchange and interaction between
physically disjointed positions)
Flows are ”expressions of processes dominating our
economic, political and symbolic life.” (p. 442).
How do we notice globalization
in everyday life?
Break.
3.) Expressions of Globalization
 How is the organization of our world different
now (in the midst of the process of globalization)
compared to ’before’?
’Expression 1’: The Rise of Global
Cities
Mainly located and considered within the
economy-dimension of globalization
According to Castells’ ’trilogy’, in globalization
cities have become increasinlgy important
nodes for all human activity.
Globalization demands infrastructural nodes
If cities have turned into cultural, social, economic,
and political centers….is the rural rendered
dysfunctional?
’Expression 2’ - Cosmopolitanism
Cosmopolitanism is:
 Political cosmopolitanism: Supra-national
governance, the lessening power of the nation
and the increasing power of supra-national
power. E.g. The United Nations. The world as one
nation, world citizenship. (e.g Kant, 1795,
Habermas, 1996)
 Socio-cultural cosmopolitanism: A global
awareness. Openess towards diveristy and multiculturalism. Life-style. Travelling.
”A willingness to engage with the Other”
(Hannerz, 1990; Rantanen, 2005)
’Mediated Cosmopolitanism’
On the one hand:
We can access virtual spaces (internet forums) and
engage with ’Others’ on anonymous basis –
collective efforts and common goals on a global
scale.
’Pop-cosmopolitanism’ (Jenkins, 2005) – ’Softer’
cosmopolitanism e.g. fan-communities.
Watching anime (alternative cultural
experience) -> learn about Japanese culture
’Mediated Cosmopolitanism’
…on the other hand:
What do we actually do online? Trolling, flaming ->
irrationality and inhospitality on online public spaces.
Same 10 websites over and over again. Not
”engaging with the Other”.
(Tomlinson, 2001): Technologies of the hearth: new
technologies are merely new ways in which we
communicate with the same people
(Bauman, 2001): Compassion is still local, not global – we
can see but cannot/will not act
What do you think?
Does media promote
cosmopolitanism?
- Do we engage with ’the
Other’ through media?
- Do we better understand other
cultures through media?
Thank you!
References and Reading tips
Appiah, A. (2005). Cosmopolitansim – Ethics in a World of Strangers. Penguin Books
Appadurai, A. (1995). Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization.
University of Minnesota Press
Bauman, Zygmunt. (2001). ‘Whatever Happened to Compassion?’ in Bentley,
Tom & Stedman Jones, Daniel
(ed) The Moral Universe. Demos
Castells, M. (1996). The Rise of the Network Society. Wiley-Blackwell
Castells, M. (2001). The Internet Galaxy – Reflections on the Internet, Business, and
Society. University of Oxford Press
Habermas, J. (1996). The Postnational Constellation. Polity Press
Innis, H. (1950). Empire and Communications. University of Toronto Press
Innis, H. (1951). The Bias of Communication. University of Toronto Press
Kant, I. (1795). Perpetual Peace
MacKenzie, D & Wajcman, J (ed). (1999). The Social Shaping of Technology. Open
University Press
Mosco, V. (2006). The Digital Sublime – Myth, Power and Cyberspace. MIT Press
Rantanen, T. (2005). The Media and Globalization. SAGE Publications
Sassen, S. (2001). The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo. Princeton University Press
Smith, M. R & Marx, L. (1994). Does Technology Drive History?: The Dilemma of
Technological Determinism. MIT Press
Thompson, J. (1995). Media and Modernity – A Social Theory of the Media. Stanford
University Press
Tomlinson, John. (2001). Instant access: Some cultural implications of
‘globalising’ technologies. University of
Copenhagen