‘Hollywood and Arab Identity in the Arabian Gulf’

by David McQueen

Note for the purpose of being put online this paper is now in 10 parts: see contents below.

Copyright is retained by the author. Feedback is welcomed.

 damcqueen@yahoo.com

 

Abstract:‘ Hollywood and Arab Identity’

There is an assumption, amongst some mass communication scholars, that the import of western communications systems into non-western cultures promotes economic and cultural dependency and has a negative impact on local identity. This assumption is countered by scholars who subscribe to notions of ‘active audiences’ and who propose that cultural diversity and interpenetration are hallmarks of a modern global economy. Investigations of these positions amongst non-western audiences remain few and far between. This paper investigates the use and perception of ‘Hollywood’ films amongst contemporary, indigenous audiences of the Arabian Gulf, an area that has undergone rapid ‘modernisation’ and cultural transformation in the past fifty years.

 

 

Contents

Index (current page)

Abstract                 

Part 1

Introduction 

Part 2

The Region

Part 3

Theory and Method 

Part 4

Contextual/Historical Discussion of the Topic 

Part 5

Key Issues and Finding

Part 6

Conclusion

Notes

Part 7

Sources

Part 8

Appendix 1

Part 9

Appendix 2 - Case Study 1

Part 10

Appendix 3 - Case Study 2