Articles

Media:Culture:Policy, or What we talk about when we talk about (cultural) policy

Authors
  • Sean Johnson Andrews (Columbia College - Chicago)
  • Janice Peck (University of Colorado Boulder)
  • Gilbert B. Rodman (University of Minnesota)
  • Fan Yang (杨帆) (University of Maryland, Baltimore County)

Abstract

The relationship between culture and policy has long been a major topic for media and cultural studies. With this issue, we hope to broaden the meaning of cultural policy, from policies that are explicitly regulating something we call the “cultural” (including media or traditional rituals or symbols) to include the practice of policy-making and the cultural legitimation of law and policy itself, regardless of the object or dimension of social life it regulates. The essays in this issue argue for (or at least accept) an understanding of policy as a cultural production representing certain ideological outlooks, and thus implicitly suggest that cultural policy studies should encompass a wide range of policies; at the same time, the essays are interested in the cultural mechanisms and means through which policies are promulgated and enforced - from think tanks to social media flak, from the global circulation of ideologies to the local practices of appropriation/resistance.

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How to Cite:

Johnson Andrews, S., Peck, J., Rodman, G. B. & Yang (杨帆), F., (2017) “Media:Culture:Policy, or What we talk about when we talk about (cultural) policy”, communication +1 6(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.7275/R5HQ3X33

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Published on
15 Oct 2017
Peer Reviewed