Television, Ethnicity and Cultural Change

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A01=Marie Gillespie
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asian
Author_Marie Gillespie
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british
British Tv
Brook's Production
Brook’s Production
Category=ATJ
Category=JBCC
Category=JBCC1
Category=JBCT
Category=JBSL
Category=NH
Coca Cola Ads
Coke Ads
cross-cultural communication
Devotional Viewing
diaspora media studies
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families
Fast Food
films
Guru Granth Sahib
hindi
Hindi Films
identity negotiation
Indian Films
Indian Version
media reception analysis
minority youth culture
Mrs Thatcher's Resignation
Mrs Thatcher’s Resignation
people
Popular American Tv
Popular Hindi Films
punjabi
Punjabi Families
qualitative ethnography
Ramsay Street
South Asian diaspora media consumption
southall
Southall Youth
Tv Ad
Tv Consumption
Tv News
Tv Representation
Tv Talk
Vice Versa
young
Young Men
youth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415096744
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 May 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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For 'ethnic minorities' in Britain, broadcast TV provides powerful representations of national and 'western' culture. In Southall - which has the largest population of 'South Asians' outside the Indian sub-continent - the VCR furnishes Hindi films, 'sacred soaps' such as the Mahabharata, and family videos of rites of passage, as well as mainstream American films. Television, Ethnicity and Cultural Change examines how TV and video are being used to recreate cultural traditions within the 'South Asian' diaspora, and how they are also catalysing cultural change in this local community.
Marie Gillespie explores how young people negotiate between the parental and peer, local and global, national and international contexts and culturess which traverse their lives. Articulating their own preoccupations with television narratives, they both reaffirm and challenge parental traditions, formulating their own aspirations towards cultural change.
Marie Gillespie's in-depth study offers an invaluable survey of how cultures are shaped and changed through people's recreative reception of the media.

Marie Gillespie is Lecturer in Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Wales, Swansea. She is the Diaspora Literary and Media Cultures project co-ordinator for the ESRC Transnational Communities Programme at the University of Oxford.

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