This article considers the persistence of stereotypical representations of ‘race’ that appear in television in the West. According to a particular policy discourse, improving the on-screen representation of non-white groups is a matter of increasing the number of black and Asian folk working in the broadcasting industries – particularly at the senior management level. However, this article argues that the constant production of hegemonic images of ‘race’ cannot be tackled via recruitment measures alone. Adopting a ‘cultural industries’ approach to television production, the article uses an ethnographic study of British Asians working in the UK broadcasting industry to examine the conditions of production through which minority representatio...
The aim of this article is a critical analysis of the changing landscape of American streaming and p...
This ground-breaking new book provides a unique, in-depth analysis of the BBC Asian Network, the BBC...
© 2000. Reproduced with the kind permission of Open University Press. For further information about ...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
This article seeks to develop an approach to cultural production which takes racism seriously. We su...
Edward Said’s theory of orientalism proposes that Western European culture has overwhelmingly tended...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
This thesis demonstrates that advertising is an important and neglected site of racialisation. It a...
This article explores the conditions that led to the rise and fall of British South Asian cultural p...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
What do historical representational imageries of the Chinese in television commercials tell us about...
The article argues that the working-class realism of post-WWII British television single drama is ne...
Referring to postcolonial cultural production, Graham Huggan concludes that ‘the language of resista...
The aim of this article is a critical analysis of the changing landscape of American streaming and p...
This ground-breaking new book provides a unique, in-depth analysis of the BBC Asian Network, the BBC...
© 2000. Reproduced with the kind permission of Open University Press. For further information about ...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
This article seeks to develop an approach to cultural production which takes racism seriously. We su...
Edward Said’s theory of orientalism proposes that Western European culture has overwhelmingly tended...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
This thesis demonstrates that advertising is an important and neglected site of racialisation. It a...
This article explores the conditions that led to the rise and fall of British South Asian cultural p...
This article will argue that despite gaining praise from around the world for its particular form of...
What do historical representational imageries of the Chinese in television commercials tell us about...
The article argues that the working-class realism of post-WWII British television single drama is ne...
Referring to postcolonial cultural production, Graham Huggan concludes that ‘the language of resista...
The aim of this article is a critical analysis of the changing landscape of American streaming and p...
This ground-breaking new book provides a unique, in-depth analysis of the BBC Asian Network, the BBC...
© 2000. Reproduced with the kind permission of Open University Press. For further information about ...