Hollywood’s transnational appeal: Hegemony and democratic potential?
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1999
Abstract
The popular appeal of Hollywood's products across the world invokes a complex history of globalization, nationalism, representation, and popular imagination. Although the question of Hollywood's global appeal is commonplace among scholars of transnational economy and culture, most accounts fail to address the complex political dynamics at the juncture of the nationalism of local film industries and the transnationalization of Hollywood. We take up the common assertions of Hollywood's economic and cultural dominance to argue that Hollywood's transnationalism can be viewed more adequately as a hegemonic struggle constructing a commercially mediated “democratic subject position.” We propose an alternative account of Hollywood's transnational popularity articulated to both democratic and antidemocratic politics. © 1999 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
Publication Title
Journal of Popular Film and Television
Recommended Citation
Semati, M.,
&
Sotirin, P.
(1999).
Hollywood’s transnational appeal: Hegemony and democratic potential?.
Journal of Popular Film and Television,
26(4), 176-188.
http://doi.org/10.1080/01956059909602789
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/9179