What is political economy anyway? Part 1

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Transcript What is political economy anyway? Part 1

What is Political Economy?

• • • • • Definitions by prime theorists Origins in economic thought How has it been taken up in communication studies? Major theoreticians Tensions

McChesney:

• • Relationship between media and communication systems and the broader social structures of society How do media systems reinforce, challenge, or influence existing class and social relations?

McChesney:

• • How does media ownership, support mechanisms, and government policies influence media behavior and content?

What are the structural factors and labour processes in the production, distribution, and consumption of communication?

McChesney:

• • • Pessimistic view of sustainability of p-e in American universities because of increasing corporatization But, passionate about p-e of communication as being interdisciplinary, taking risks… Advocate for media reform – public advocate

Mosco (Meehan and Wasko)

• • • • • PE examines the production, distribution, and consumption of resources, including communication and information resources History Social Totality Moral Philosophy Praxis

History

• • • • • How to understand the global political economy How has social change happened?

What have been previous struggles and how are they the same or different than current struggles?

E.g., is globalization new?

When looking at ‘new’ technologies, can the past illuminate the present (radio: Internet)…

Social Totality

• • • Holistic analysis Relationship among commodities, institutions, social relations, and hegemony What are the connections between the economic and the political?

Commodity form

• • • • Use of wage labour to produce goods that are sold in the marketplace Media forms: television genres, databases, PPV Commodification of information Corporatization of public space

Institutions

• • • • Those that support, sustain, subvert public and private activities Tensions between public vs. private Globalization exacerbating nation-state, capital, labour relationships Closely interpenetrated regimes of power and control in media systems

Social Relations

• • • How do people engage with the media?

Issues of race, class, gender Have’s and have-not’s

That H Word – Hegemony

• • • • Process of constituting the common sense Origins from Gramsci – how to understand capitalist society Used in analysis of social control Beyond ideology – appears natural

Some examples from everyday life…

• • • • • We take for granted that… Voting = democratic process Capitalistic marketplace = productive & fair society Objectivity as cornerstone of journalism (Now, let’s challenge these dominant hegemonies!)

Moral Philosophical Outlooks

• • • • Social values What are appropriate social benefits?

An ethics of information in society… E.g., who are the winners and who are the losers?

Praxis

• • • • In essence, practice & action Concerned with social justice Fighting for the public interest Public intellectual stance

Mosco and Reddick

• • • “…the study of control and survival in social life” Social transformation, social totality, moral philosophy, praxis Argues for a rethinking of p-e of communications with entry points of commodification, spatialization, and structuration

Commodification

• • How capitalism accumulates capital and realizes value through the transformation of use values into exchange values In short, the process of transforming use values into exchange values

How does this relate to imcommunication?

• • “Communication processes & technologies contribute to the general process of commodification in the economy as a whole” Ex: just-in-time manufacturing, quick response systems, e-commerce, information entrepreneurial

And, (this is from Mosco, 1996, 142)

• • “Commodification processes at work in the society as a whole penetrate communication processes and institutions, so that improvements and contradictions in the societal commodification process influence communication as a social practice” E.g., deregulation, liberalization of media industries & telecom sectors

Commodification research

• • • • • Class power Media elites Ownership patterns Audience commodity Government-lobbyist liaisons

Policy Research…

• • • • Policy – how this has contributed to media commodification (neoliberalism) Tensions between public and private spheres Media & democracy Public interest (whither the…) – ex: Aufderheide on US Telecom Act of 1996

Spatialization

• • • • Overcoming the constraints of space and time in social life Coined by Henri Lefebvre Innis’ work on time-space Castell – “space of flows” in describing network society

Spatialization related to communication studies

• • • • • Addressed in institutional extension of corporate power in communications industry Analysis of corporate concentration Horizontal and vertical integration Conglomerization, cross-media ownership Media ownership mapping

Spatialization….and policy

• • • • Commercialization Privatization Liberalization Internationalization

Structuration

• • • “A process by which structures are constituted out of human agency, even as they provide the very ‘medium’ of that constitution” (Mosco, 1996, 212) Looks at agency, social relations, social process, social practice, social movements Looks at class, gender, hegemony…