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Changing Media, Changing Europe
Series Editors: Peter Golding and Ib Bondebjerg
Changing Media, Changing Europe is a book series of new essays bringing together original analyses of the changing landscape of the media in Europe. The books arise from a unique five year European Science Foundation programme ‘Changing Media, Changing Europe’ – in which leading scholars from across the continent met to work together to produce innovative discussion and analysis of the interaction of rapid changes in the culture and politics of the mass media with complex shifts in social and economic dynamics within and across cultures. Drawing on insights and research in a range of disciplines, some of Europe’s leading scholars contribute new articles, arising from their involvement in the ESF Programme.
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Money Talks
Media, Markets, Crisis

Media, Markets and Public Spheres
European Media at the Crossroads
Using a sample of European newspapers and their TV listings as a stepping stone Media Markets and Public Spheres presents an overview of changes in European public spheres over the last fifty years. With in-depth analyses of structural changes in press and broadcasting changing relations between media and changes in media policies this book explores how and why the media decisively influence most aspects of society. Media Markets and Public Spheres will be useful to students in media and communication studies and European studies as well as for those studying sociology and political science.

We Europeans?
Media, Representations, Identities

Convergence and Fragmentation
Media Technology and the Information Society

Media Between Culture and Commerce
An Introduction
In the face of declining newspaper sales challenges from online competitors and flagging ratings for broadcast news programs media companies have struggled to maintain their relevance. Media between Culture and Commerce brings together a group of European media experts to address the consequences of a system that is increasingly powered by global media conglomerates that set the pace of news and information. As national borders blur and the corporations behind journalism and broadcasting continue to merge this timely volume will prove a necessary resource to those interested in European media studies and globalization.

The Professionalisation of Political Communication

Audiences and Publics
When Cultural Engagement Matters for the Public Sphere

European Culture and the Media
We are witnessing a dynamic reshaping of the European 'mediascape'. This has been underway for more than a decade since the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 the growing impact of globalisation and the birth of new technologies and new media or the convergence between old and new media. A new and more intense 'mediatisation' of society and everyday life is emerging. This is happening alongside the rapid reconstruction of the cultural and economic landscape of Europe itself. In this transformation the communicative and ideological dimensions the digitalisation of technology and changes in culture - 'the imaginary' the discursive universe of politics and communication are all crucial areas for research. The cultural industries (film television books magazines entertainment and music) but also the world of news actuality 'infotainment' and the internet are key areas for the study of what we may begin to understand as a changing European culture in all its complexity and with all its differences and conflicts. The media and the cultural industries are among the fastest growing sectors in the global economy.

European Culture and the Media
We are witnessing a dynamic reshaping of the European 'mediascape'. This has been underway for more than a decade since the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 the growing impact of globalisation and the birth of new technologies and new media or the convergence between old and new media. A new and more intense 'mediatisation' of society and everyday life is emerging. This is happening alongside the rapid reconstruction of the cultural and economic landscape of Europe itself. In this transformation the communicative and ideological dimensions the digitalisation of technology and changes in culture - 'the imaginary' the discursive universe of politics and communication are all crucial areas for research. The cultural industries (film television books magazines entertainment and music) but also the world of news actuality 'infotainment' and the internet are key areas for the study of what we may begin to understand as a changing European culture in all its complexity and with all its differences and conflicts. The media and the cultural industries are among the fastest growing sectors in the global economy.