Broadcasting Policy in a New Cultural Regine: The Case of Australian Television
Author(s)
Flew, Terry
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
1994
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The 'New Tunes' argument is that the world has changed, not just incrementally but qualitatively, that Britain and other advanced capitalist societies are increasingly characterised by diversity, differentiation and fragmentation, rather than homogeneity, standardisation and the economies and organisations of scale which characterised modem mass society ... we have witnessed a qualitative change, which has shifted the centre of gravity of the society and culture markedly and decisively in a new direction (Stuart Hall and Martin Jacques, 'Introduction', in New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s). l am going ...
View more >The 'New Tunes' argument is that the world has changed, not just incrementally but qualitatively, that Britain and other advanced capitalist societies are increasingly characterised by diversity, differentiation and fragmentation, rather than homogeneity, standardisation and the economies and organisations of scale which characterised modem mass society ... we have witnessed a qualitative change, which has shifted the centre of gravity of the society and culture markedly and decisively in a new direction (Stuart Hall and Martin Jacques, 'Introduction', in New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s). l am going to strongly resist the urge to bring significance and profundity to the coming of the millennium (Judy Davis, HQ Magazine, Summer 1992/93) Has the -world changed or have I changed.' ('The Queen is Dead', The Smiths, recorded in 1986).
View less >
View more >The 'New Tunes' argument is that the world has changed, not just incrementally but qualitatively, that Britain and other advanced capitalist societies are increasingly characterised by diversity, differentiation and fragmentation, rather than homogeneity, standardisation and the economies and organisations of scale which characterised modem mass society ... we have witnessed a qualitative change, which has shifted the centre of gravity of the society and culture markedly and decisively in a new direction (Stuart Hall and Martin Jacques, 'Introduction', in New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s). l am going to strongly resist the urge to bring significance and profundity to the coming of the millennium (Judy Davis, HQ Magazine, Summer 1992/93) Has the -world changed or have I changed.' ('The Queen is Dead', The Smiths, recorded in 1986).
View less >
Journal Title
Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Policy
Volume
73
Subject
Built Environment and Design
Studies in Human Society
Studies in Creative Arts and Writing
Language, Communication and Culture