1. A Multilayered World of Television: An Overview
Globalization and Culture
Complexity, Structuration, and Cultural Agents
Structural and Cultural Process Frameworks for World Television
Roles and Impacts of Technology
Asymmetrical Interdependence and Asymmetrical Cultural Interpenetration: A Proposed Model
Imported TV Versus Local and National: Producers Localize, Glocalize, and Hybridize
Cultural Identification and Proximity
2. Hybridization and the Roots of Transnational, Geocultural and Cultural-Linguistic Markets
Precolonial Cultural History and Television
Emergent Change Versus Hybridization
The Roots of Transnational, Geocultural, and Cultural-Linguistic Regions and Markets
Broadcasting Models: From Colonial to Postcolonial
Hybridity and National Development
3. Creating National and Regional Television and Cultural Industries
Dependency, the Cold War, and Television Industry Production
Cultural Imperialism and Media Imperialism
Local Cultural Production
The Nation-State and Television
Import Substitution in Cultural Industries
Adaptation and Glocalization of Foreign Models
The Cultural Role of States: National Security and National Identity
Achieving National Coverage via Satellite
Television Above and Below the National Level
Glocal Processes and National Identities
4. Creating Global, U.S., and Transnational Television Spaces
Globalization, Broadly Defined
Globalization as the Spread of Capitalist Modernity
Economic Neoliberalism and American Empire
Globalization, Changing National Policy, and the State
Global Spread of Market Capitalism
Migration as Globalization
Asymmetrical Interdependence and World Television
5. Increasing Complexity: The Technology of Creating Global and National Television Spaces
Television Technology as a Structuring Force
Technology and Production
Technology and Media Distribution and Flows
TV Technology, Access, and Choice
Cable and Satellite TV Relative to Broadcast TV
6. Producing National Television, Glocal and Local
Structuring the Producers' World
Television Genre and Structure
Cultural Industry Producers
Economic Boundaries on Television Genre and Program Development
Complexity, Patterns, and Genres
Cultural Boundaries: Feedback to Producers
Complexity, Prefiguration, and Cultural Hybridity
Localization as Japanization or Brazilianization
Structuration and Television Production in Brazil
The Hybrid History of the Telenovela
National Television Flows and Production
TV and Genre Flow Conclusions
7. TV Exporters: From American Empire to Cultural-Linguistic Markets
Genres Flowed Before Programs
Trends Toward Regionalization of Television
Overall Trends in Broadcast Television Flows
From Program Genre and Idea Flows to Licensed Format Flows
Localization of Global and Transnational Television Channels
Broadcast Television Genre Flows Versus Satellite, Cable, and Internet Flows
8. Multiple Proximities Between Television Genres and Audiences: Choosing Between National, Transnational, and Global Television
Culture-Bound Reception and Multiple Proximities
Cultural Capital, Cultural Proximity, and the Audience
Layers of Reception Within Brazil and Italy
Cultural Proximity Within Culturally Bound Reception Practices
9. Making Sense of World Television: Hybridization or Multilayered Cultural Identities?
Multiple Levels of Audience Identity and Cultural Choices
The Process of Hybridization
Hybridization Versus Multiple Layers of Identity and Culture
Researching Audiences and Their Identities
Cultural Geography: Cultural Distance, Global, National, and Local Identities
Language/Culture-Defined Spaces and Markets
Multilevel Identities and Social Class
Hybridization and Social Class
Hybridization: Race and Ethnic Identity
Gender Identity and Television
Layers of Identity as Boundaries for Choices and Understandings
Layers of Identities as Mediators of Media Meaning
Reconfiguration and Synthesis of Identities