出版時間:2007-12 出版社:上海復旦大學 作者:曹晉,趙月枝主編 頁數(shù):469
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前言
每一種學術(shù)思想的發(fā)端都不是孤立于社會情境的,傳播政治經(jīng)濟學也不例外,其學術(shù)發(fā)展與資本主義體系在全球范圍內(nèi)的建立、急劇擴張以及與之相抗爭的社會運動的發(fā)展密切相關(guān)。同時,任何一個學科身份與地位的確立,除了其內(nèi)在學理與研究路徑的充實與豐富之外,更重要的推進源泉還在于社會行動與實踐力量的相互建構(gòu),以及學術(shù)流派之間的對話與交鋒。莫斯可(Vincent Mosco)以商品化(commodification)、空間化(spatialization)和結(jié)構(gòu)化(structuration)切入傳播政治經(jīng)濟學分析(Mosco,1996);趙月枝把傳播政治經(jīng)濟學對傳播與社會權(quán)力關(guān)系的分析模式解構(gòu)為四個相互關(guān)聯(lián)的主要組成部分,即提供語境(contextualizing)、圖繪(mapping)、衡量(measuring/evaluating)與干預(intervening)(趙月枝,2007a;趙月枝、邢國欣,2007)。這個讀本,因篇幅局限,難以囊括傳播政治經(jīng)濟學范疇全部的認識論、方法論與全球各地本土實踐的經(jīng)驗成果,僅以傳播政治經(jīng)濟學所主要關(guān)切的研究議題為核心,分別從該學派的歷史起源與理論基礎,方法思索與跨學科對話,廣告的權(quán)力與受眾商品的塑造,產(chǎn)權(quán)與盎格魯一美國語境下的控制,資本主義整合的全球、民族與本土動力,轉(zhuǎn)型的場域、能動性與進程等六個方面建構(gòu)這個學派批判性的闡釋路徑。讀本的論文組織以英美為主,兼顧其他國家與地區(qū),主流批判中涵蓋另類建設,突出對話,在傳播與政治經(jīng)濟相互關(guān)聯(lián)、作用的過程中關(guān)注多樣化的論題,并貫穿階級、社會性別、種族、國家與區(qū)域的研究視野。一、傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的馬克思主義學術(shù)指向自從資本主義產(chǎn)生的那一天起,資本主義在帶來社會生產(chǎn)力的飛速發(fā)展和社會財富的高度積聚的同時,也帶來了剝削、壓迫、不平等和血腥,包括殖民暴力、法西斯主義、20世紀的兩次世界大戰(zhàn)和對人類賴以生存的文化和生態(tài)系統(tǒng)的侵蝕。因此,意識形態(tài)和資本主義制度的再生產(chǎn)、不平等的社會關(guān)系在社會文化領(lǐng)域的構(gòu)建和合法化、馬克思和恩格斯在《德意志意識形態(tài)》中所言的統(tǒng)治階級的思想是如何成為占統(tǒng)治地位的思想的問題,包括丹?席勒(Dan Schiller)在《羅伯特?A?布萊第的遺產(chǎn):傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的反法西斯起源》一文中所提到的社會文化傳播系統(tǒng)是如何把工人階級的革命直覺(revolutionary instincts)平復和淡化的問題,就成了一個半世紀以來后馬克思學者們上下求索的問題。這些學者不斷從各自社會情境的“當代性”出發(fā),討論馬克思理論的內(nèi)容指向和實踐品格。馬克思理論文本歷經(jīng)著不同國籍的學者解讀、詮釋與實踐,已在世界范圍內(nèi)形成了一個復雜的馬克思主義傳統(tǒng)。
內(nèi)容概要
讀本以傳播政治經(jīng)濟學所主要關(guān)切的研究議題為核心,分別從該學派的歷史起源與理論基礎,方法思索與跨學科對話,廣告的權(quán)力與受眾商品的塑造,產(chǎn)權(quán)與盎格魯—美國語境下的控制,資本主義整合的全球、民族與本土動力,轉(zhuǎn)型的場域、能動性與進程等六個方面建構(gòu)這個學派批判性的闡釋路徑。讀本的論文組織以英美為主,兼顧其他國家與地區(qū),主流批判中涵蓋另類建設,突出對話,在傳播與政治經(jīng)濟相互關(guān)聯(lián)、作用的過程中關(guān)注多樣化的論題,并貫穿階級、社會性別、種族、國家與區(qū)域的研究視野。
作者簡介
曹晉,復旦大學新聞學院副教授,國際出版研究中心副主任,教育部人文社會科學重點研究基地“信息與傳播研究中心”副研究員,“國家哲學社會科學創(chuàng)新基地新聞傳播與媒介化社會研究”副研究員,美國耶魯大學高級訪問學者,致力于批判傳播理論與書刊出版研究。趙月枝,加拿大西蒙弗雷澤大學傳播學博士,曾任教于美國加州大學圣地亞哥分校傳播系,現(xiàn)為加拿大西蒙弗雷澤大學全球傳播政治經(jīng)濟學加拿大國家研究教授,全球媒介監(jiān)測與分析實驗室主任。
書籍目錄
序言 曹晉 趙月枝Part One: Historical Origins and Theoretical Foundations1. Theories of Communication and Theories of SocietyPeter GoldingGraham Murdock 2. The Legacy of Robert A. Brady: Antifascist Origins of the Political Economy of Communications Dan Schiller3. The Frankfurt School and the Political Economy of CommunicationsRonald V. Bettig 4. Communications: Blindspot of Western Marxism Dallas W. Smythe5. “Introduction” to Who Knows: Information in the Age of Fortune 500 Herbert I. Schiller 6. “Introduction” to Information and the Crisis EconomyHerbert I. Schiller 7. Reconstructing the Ruined Tower: Contemporary Communications and Questions of Class Graham Murdock 8. The Information Commodity: A Preliminary View Dan Schiller 9. The Political Economy Approach: A Critical ChallengeOscar H. Gandy, Jr. 10. Political Economy, Communication, and LaborVincent Mosco11. Political Economy, Power and New MediaRobin Mansell Part Two: Methodological Considerations and Disciplinary Dialogues 12. Abstracted EmpiricismC. Wright Mills13. Media Sociology: The Dominant Paradigm Todd Gitlin 14. The Rediscovery of “Ideology”: Return of the Repressed in Media StudiesStuart Hall 15. Rethinking Political Economy: Change and ContinuityEileen R. Meehan Vincent Mosco Janet Wasko 16. Not Yet the PostImperialist EraHerbert I. Schiller17. The Political Economy of Communication and the Future of the Field Robert W. McChesney Part Three: The Power of Advertising and the Making of the Audience Commodity18. Advertising at the Edge of the ApocalypseSut Jhally19. The Restructuring of the European Advertising IndustryArmand Mattelart20. Capitalism and Control of the Press James Curran 21. Advertising and the Content of a Democratic Press C. Edwin Baker22. Gendering the Commodity Audience: Critical Media Research, Feminism, and Political Economy Eileen R. Meehan23. Race, Ethnicity and the Segmentation of Media MarketsOscar H. Gandy, Jr.Part Four: Ownership and Control in the AngloAmerican Contexts: Capital, the State, and Other Social Forces24. The Process of Legitimation-Ⅱ Ralph Miliband25. A Propaganda Model Edward HermanNoam Chomsky26. Extending and Refining the Propaganda ModelColin Sparks27. Large Corporations and the Control of the Communications Industries Graham Murdock28. The Publishing Industry Mark Crispin Miller29. Speaking Volumes: The Book Publishing Oligopoly and Its Cultural ConsequencesLeah F. Binder30. Government Financial Support to the Film Industry in the United StatesThomas Guback31.The New Theology of the First Amendment: Class Privilege over DemocracyRobert W. McChesney 32. Copyright and the Commodification of CultureRonald V. Bettig 33. Stealth Regulation: Moral Meltdown and Political Radicalism at the Federal Communications CommissionAndrew Calabrese 34. Dynamics of Power in Contemporary Media PolicyMaking Des Freedman 35. Commercialism and Professionalism in the American News Media Daniel C. Hallin 36. The Hidden Side of Television Violence George Gerbner Part Five:International Perspectives: The Global, and National, and Local Dynamics of Capitalist Integration 37. The Context: Great Media Debate Kaarle Nordenstreng 38. The Processes: From Nationalisms to Transnationals Jésus MartínBarbero39. Communication and the Postcolonial NationState: A New Political Economic Research AgendaAmin Alhassan 40. Who Speaks for Asia: Media and Information Control in the Global Economy Gerald SussmanJohn A. Lent41. Global ProductionsGerald SussmanJohn A. Lent42. Political Economy and Ethnography: Transformations in an Indian Village Manjunath Pendakur43. A Contemporary “Denial of Access”: Knowledge, IPR and the Public Good Pradip Thomas Part Six: Sites, Agents and Processes of Transformation44. Rethinking Media and Democracy James Curran45. Cycles and Circuits of Struggle in High-Technology CapitalismNick Witheford46. For a Political Economy of Indymedia PracticeBob Hanke47. Global Commons, Public Space and Contemporary IPR Lawrence Liang48. Who Speaks for the Governed? World Summit on Information Society, Civil Society and the Limits of “Multistakeholderism”Paula Chakravartty 文獻出處出版后記
章節(jié)摘錄
Manufacturing InequalityThe process is not novel. Before the nineteenth century was two decades old, it was clearthat the established vocabulary of "ranks" and "estates" had been over-taken by events. Itwas altogether too rigid to catch capitalism's creative destruction of the old social order. Anew, more flexible, term was needed to describe the emerging pattern of economic divisions.That term was "class." But as John Stuart Mill noted in 1834, the classification of society into” landlords, capitalists and laborers" rapidly became as ossified and a historical as the feudal vision it had displaced. Too many commentators, he complained:... seem, to think of the distinction of society into those three classes as if it were one of God's ordinances not man's, and ... scarcely any one of them seems to have proposed to himself as a subject of inquiry, what changes the relations of those classes to one another are likely to undergo in the progress of society,(Quoted in Briggs, 1985: 3). Of the various writers who took up the challenge of mapping shifts in class relations, Marx has been by far and away the most enduringly influential. Unfortunately, he diedconceptually intestate. Although he saw class as the axial principle of social division, and class struggle as the principle engine of historical change, he never provided a concise definition of what exactly he meant by a class. As he notes on the final page of the last, and unfinished, volume of his magnum opus, Capital, "What constitutes a class" is the obvious "first question to be answered" in any class analysis (Marx, 1863-7) but, tantalizingly, the manuscript breaks off a few lines later before he offers an answer. Looking across the range of his work, however, we can identify five basic dimensions to his analysis of class:? class structure? class formation? class culture? class consciousness, and? class action. Even his fiercest critics have tended to accept this list as a serviceable agenda for research and debate.
后記
在文森特?莫斯可(Vincent Mosco,1996)的《傳播政治經(jīng)濟學:反思與更新》(ThePolitical Economy of Communication:Rethinking and Renewal)沒有出版之前,大部分中國學者對美國的主流傳播研究(以實證為基礎)的知識積累較為豐富。同時,對批判取向的研究,通常會意識到歐洲的批判學派的價值,但實際上,一旦展布傳播政治經(jīng)濟學在北美的學術(shù)脈絡,我們就會領(lǐng)悟到美國實證研究之外的批判的足音,以及它是怎樣通過大學師徒傳承和學術(shù)社群連接的薪火力量,不僅彌補了主流研究之缺失,而且解構(gòu)了主流研究本身背后的知識生產(chǎn)與社會權(quán)力關(guān)系。毋庸置疑,20世紀后半期至今,傳播政治經(jīng)濟學與文化研究在西方傳播學術(shù)領(lǐng)域中頗有建樹,隨著西方學術(shù)理論的全球旅行進程與翻譯出版業(yè)所促進的知識的流動性的日新月異,這兩個學派越來越為中國學者所了解與熟悉。由于國內(nèi)原版英文文獻相對缺少,對深入洞察學術(shù)流派的核心精神往往造成局限,因此,筆者在廣泛閱讀論著的基礎上,精心選取了48篇傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的專題論文,結(jié)集出版,以中文序言簡要地勾勒并比較西方傳播研究的主要學術(shù)傳統(tǒng),從學術(shù)淵源、研究取向、價值理念和方法及其主要研究學派之間的論戰(zhàn)等面向梳理批判傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的形貌。一路思來,編輯讀本的往事歷歷在目。兩位中外華人學者的合作可以說是恰好折射了中國傳播學術(shù)走向國際化、開放性和多元化的路徑。趙月枝20世紀80年代中期就出國留學,走的是以傳播政治經(jīng)濟學為主要思想資源的批判學術(shù)路徑,先后在北美傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的重鎮(zhèn)美國加州大學圣迭戈分校和加拿大西蒙弗雷澤大學(Simon Fraser University)從事傳播政治經(jīng)濟學教學與研究。她目前所在的西蒙弗雷澤大學傳播學院,是當年曾經(jīng)培育、熏染了四代傳播政治經(jīng)濟學人的學科鼻祖之一達拉斯?斯麥茲(Dallas Smythe)任職時間最長、直到退休的學術(shù)驛站。在對這個學派素有積累的前提下,曹晉2003年在英國出版商協(xié)會訪問期間得到部分珍貴的傳播政治經(jīng)濟學英文文獻,對照中國大陸出版集團化改革的調(diào)查結(jié)果,備加感覺傳播政治經(jīng)濟學學理對闡釋中國出版業(yè)的豐富潛力,而2005年在耶魯大學精讀文森特?莫斯可教授的《傳播政治經(jīng)濟學》英文版的欣喜、震撼與訪談耶魯大學出版社社長John Donatich所獲悉的信息——美國高端權(quán)威學術(shù)出版機構(gòu)也難以對抗商業(yè)出版的壟斷趨勢,曹晉更加深切地意識到創(chuàng)新出版學科的研究與碩士課程的教學,離不開傳播政治經(jīng)濟學的基礎理論與方法。
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《傳播政治經(jīng)濟學(英文讀本)(上下)》是由復旦大學出版社出版的。
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