No. 6, Spring/Summer 2001
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"Reconsidering cultural imperialism theory" by Livingston A. White
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References

Table 1 Various definitions of cultural imperialism

Definitions
1. Schiller (1979): "The concept of cultural imperialism today [1979] best describes the sum of the processes by which a society is brought into the modern world system and how its dominating stratum is attracted, pressured, forced, and sometimes bribed into shaping social institutions to correspond to, or even promote, the values and structures of the dominating center of the system. The public media are the foremost example of operating enterprises that are used in the penetrative process. For penetration on a significant scale the media themselves must be captured by the dominating/penetrating power. This occurs largely through the commercialization of broadcasting. (The press invariably is commercial at the outset.)" (pp. 9-10)

2. McPhail (1987): "Electronic colonialism is the dependency relationship established by the importation of communication hardware, foreign-produced software, along with engineers, technicians, and related information protocols, that vicariously establish a set of foreign norms, values, and expectations which, in varying degrees, may alter the domestic cultures and socialization processes." (p.18)

3. Sui-Nam Lee (1988): "Communication imperialism can be defined as the process in which the ownership and control over the hardware and software of mass media as well as other major forms of communication in one country are singly or together subjugated to the domination of another country with deleterious effects on the indigenous values, norms and culture." (p. 74)

4. Ogan (1988): "Media imperialism is often described as a process whereby the United States and Western Europe produce most of the media products, make the first profits from domestic sales, and then market the products in Third World countries at costs considerably lower than those the countries would have to bear to produce similar products at home." (p. 94)

5. Downing, Mohammadi, and Sreberny-Mohammadi (1995): "Imperialism is the conquest and control of one country by a more powerful one. Cultural imperialism signifies the dimensions of the process that go beyond economic exploitation or military force. In the history of colonialism, (i.e., the form of imperialism in which the government of the colony is run directly by foreigners), the educational and media systems of many Third World countries have been set up as replicas of those in Britain, France, or the United States and carry their values. Western advertising has made further inroads, as have architectural and fashion styles. Subtly but powerfully, the message has often been insinuated that Western cultures are superior to the cultures of the Third World." (p. 482)

 

Table 2: A list of authors who have written on cultural imperialism
Year Author(s)
1976 Schiller
1977 Boyd-Barrett
1978 Beltran; Burton and Franco
1979 Galtung
1980 Lee
1981 Fejes; Sarti
1982 Desousa
1983 Hamelink
1984 Link
1986 Laing; Becker, Hedebro and Paldan
1987 Meyer; McPhail
1988 Ogan; Sui-Nam Lee; Meyer
1989 Schiller
1990 Liebes and Katz
1991 Straubhaar; Salwen; Schiller; Tomlinson
1992 Land
1993 Boyd-Barrett and Thussu; Oliveira; Said
1994 Ware & Dupagne; Mattleart
1995 Sui-Nam Lee; Mohammadi; Downing, Mohammadi and Sreberny-Mohammadi; Brown; Sabga
1996 Sinclair, Jacka and Cunningham
1997 Sengupta and Frith; Roach
1998 Meers
2000 Straubhaar
Copyright 2001 Transnational Broadcasting Studies
TBS is published by the Adham Center for Television Journalism, the American University in Cairo
E-mail: TBS@aucegypt.edu