The global, the local, and the hybrid: A native ethnography of glocalization
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Studies in Mass Communication
- Vol. 16 (4) , 456-476
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15295039909367111
Abstract
International communication processes have been alternately understood as part of an overriding world process of globalization, or in terms of a polarity, between local audiences and global media, whose terms are disputed by the cultural imperialism and active audience formations. Departing from an interdisciplinary literature coalescing on cultural hybridity, I argue that hybridity is a pervasive but evasive cultural condition. I then theorize and utilize native ethnography to empirically examine how Maronite youth in Lebanon articulate local practices and global discourses to enact hybridity. Hybridity is construed as a space of oblique signification where power relations are dialogically reinscribed. Demonstrating that hybridity is not the negation of identity but its quotidian and inevitable condition, I advocate native ethnography as an epistemological approach and cultural hybridity as an ontological grounding for the ongoing internationalization of media and cultural studies. Finally, the concept of “glocalization”; is proposed as a more inclusive and heuristic alternative to “globalization. “Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Broadcasting regulation and civil society in Postwar LebanonJournal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1998
- Learning to consume: An ethnographic study of cultural change in HungaryCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
- Across the great divide: Cultural analysis and the condition of democracyCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
- Cultural studies and/in new worlds1Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1993
- Lebanese broadcasting: Unofficial electronic media during a prolonged civil warJournal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1991
- Beyond media imperialism: Assymetrical interdependence and cultural proximityCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1991
- Not yet the post‐imperialist eraCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1991
- Cultural differences in the retelling of television fictionCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1988
- Wandering audiences, nomadic criticsCultural Studies, 1988
- Relocating the site of the audienceCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1988