Full Text

Global Media, History of

Dwayne Winseck


Extract

The first phase of a truly global media network ran from the 1860s through the 1920s. Two major interpretations of this era are available. One, long established, emphasizes how aggressive nation-states deployed communication firms to further their own economic and political goals in carving up the planet (→  Cultural Imperialism Theories ). Another, more recent, reads the period as one of capitalist cosmopolitanism, noting the international cartels and other multinational enterprises that in actual fact dominated the growth of the first global technical infrastructure for communication. However, growing nationalism and protectionism over the 1920s put paid to early proposals for a constructively regulated global communication system. The flow of →  news and →  Information has followed channels of trade, migration, and cultural contact for millennia. Media historians, however, usually look to the period between the second half of the nineteenth century and the turn of the twentieth, when a global media system emerged consisting of a worldwide network of submarine cables and →  news agencies interlinked with urban and national telegraph systems and national commercial press systems (→  Telegraph, History of ; Telegraphic News ). While access was limited to financiers, traders, diplomats, and military strategists, the rise of these global media coincided with the birth of the commercial ... log in or subscribe to read full text

Log In

You are not currently logged-in to Blackwell Reference Online

If your institution has a subscription, you can log in here:

 

     Forgotten your password?

Find out how to subscribe.

Your library does not have access to this title. Please contact your librarian to arrange access.


[ access key 0 : accessibility information including access key list ] [ access key 1 : home page ] [ access key 2 : skip navigation ] [ access key 6 : help ] [ access key 9 : contact us ] [ access key 0 : accessibility statement ]

Blackwell Publishing Home Page

Blackwell Reference Online ® is a Blackwell Publishing Inc. registered trademark
Technology partner: Semantico Ltd.

Blackwell Publishing and its licensors hold the copyright in all material held in Blackwell Reference Online. No material may be resold or published elsewhere without Blackwell Publishing's written consent, save as authorised by a licence with Blackwell Publishing or to the extent required by the applicable law.

Back to Top