Commentary

Where is the Global in Media Theory (and When)?

Author: David Morley (Goldsmiths, University of London)

  • Where is the Global in Media Theory (and When)?

    Commentary

    Where is the Global in Media Theory (and When)?

    Author:

Abstract

What are the premises of the major questions in media theory? Arguing for better questions this contribution notes the persistence of eurocentricism, ­mediacentricism and technological determinism and the dominance of the ­experience of what Jared Diamond calls the WEIRD (Western Educated Industrialized Rich Democracies) nations in framing the terms of debate and study.

Anthropology in works such as Larkin (2008) may help defamiliarise the ­presumptions of western media theory and more clearly address the question of ‘Where is the global “Greenwich Mean Time” of Media Theory?’ Arguing for the need to place the technological present in historical perspective (cf Edgerton, 2008) this contribution makes the case for the primacy of historical and spatial contexts over the immediate moment of technological invention – on which so much attention is customarily focussed. To focus on media technologies and ‘inventions’ without considerations of their context runs the risks of embracing such dangerous simplifications as the idea that their socio-cultural effects can be deduced from their presumed technological ‘essences’ – whereas any given technology may very well come to have quite different significance in varying cultural contexts.

Keywords: media technologies, media theory, Eurocentricism

How to Cite:

Morley, D., (2017) “Where is the Global in Media Theory (and When)?”, Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture 12(1), 7-8. doi: https://doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.238

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Published on
30 Jan 2017
Peer Reviewed

Download the audio file here: https://doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.238.s1

Competing Interests

The author has no competing interests to declare.

Author Information

David Morley is currently Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London and begun his career as a Research Fellow at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies in Birmingham. At Goldsmiths he co-founded the Transnational Research Unit and the Pacific Asia Cultural Studies Forum. He is the editor of Routledge’s Comedia book series and the author of books including Television, Audiences and Cultural Studies (1992), Media Modernity and Technology: The Geography of the New (2007) and Communications and Mobility: The Mobile Phone, the Migrant and the Container Box (forthcoming, 2017). He currently serves on the Editorial/Advisory Boards of a number of journals, including The European Journal of Cultural Studies, Television and New Media and Inter-Asia Cultural Studies.

References

1  Edgerton, D.. (2008).  The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900. London: Profile Books.

2  Larkin, B.. (2008).  Signal and Noise: Media, Infastructure and Urban Culture in Nigeria. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.