The Cultural Economy of Postconsensus Television

Authors

  • Esteve Sanz Yale Law School. Information Society Project

Keywords:

Television Industry, Cultural Analysis, Globalization, Television Fiction, Meaning-Making

Abstract

This article analyzes the production and popularization of current iconic televisual fictions from a cultural economic point of view. It argues that postconsensus shows, where social meanings are renewed rather than reproduced, are both symptom and cause of the emergence of a new type of media landscape, where the cultural articulation of the dynamics of exclusion and incorporation are key. The article defines and provides evidence of these dynamics in relation to the main economic trends of the industry and considers the potential future of this trajectory in the context of the Internet culture.

Author Biography

Esteve Sanz, Yale Law School. Information Society Project

Esteve Sanz is a Postdoctoral Associate in Law and Thomson Reuters Fellow at the Information Society Project of the Yale Law School. Previously he worked at the Information Society Unit of the Institute for Prospective Technological Studies, one of the eight research centers of the European Commission. He was a postdoctoral fellow at MIT and the Sociology Department of Yale University. He has also authored several publications on information society, media, globalization, and government. His current research is on the cultural dimension of information society policies.EducationPh.D., (Sociology), Internet Interdisciplinary Institute, 2007 M.Phil (Government), London School of Economics and Political Science, 2007 B.A., University of Barcelona, 2000

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Published

2014-06-16

Issue

Section

Articles