This article responds to what is regarded as a widespread critique of the phenomenon of tabloidization in television news and current affairs. Arguing that this is a phenomenon which cultural studies has found difficulty in critiquing - at least partly due to cultural studies’ populist heritage - this article sets out to suggest what kind of role cultural criticism should play in the analysis of contemporary television news and current affairs programming.
Branigan, Tony (1998) ‘How Will the New Media Affect Television?’, Media International Australia incorporating Culture and Policy86: 54-62.
2.
Franklin, Bob (1998) Newszak and News Media. London: Edward Arnold.
3.
Frow, John (1995) Cultural Studies and Cultural Value. London: Oxford University Press.
4.
Gitlin, Todd (1997) ‘The Anti-Political Populism of Cultural Studies’, in Marjorie Ferguson and Peter Golding (eds) Cultural Studies in Question. London: Sage.
5.
Hall, Stuart (1993) ‘Culture, Community, Nation’, Cultural Studies7(3): 349-363.
6.
Hartley, John (1996) Popular Reality: Journalism, Modernity, Popular Culture. London: Edward Arnold.
7.
Langer, John (1998) Tabloid Television: Popular Journalism and the ‘Other’ News. London: Routledge.
8.
Lumby, Catharine (1997) Bad Girls: The Media, Sex and Feminism in the 90s. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
9.
McGuigan, Jim (1992) Cultural Populism. London: Routledge.
10.
Mascariotte, Gloria-Jean (1991) ‘C’mon Girl: Oprah Winfrey and the Discourse of Feminine Talk’, Genders11: 81-110.
11.
Milliband, Ralph (1978) ‘A State of De-subordination’, British Journal of Sociology29(4): 401-410.
12.
Ross, Andrew (1989) No Respect: Intellectuals and Popular Culture. New York: Routledge.
13.
Shattuc, Jane (1998) ‘Go Ricki: Politics, Perversion and Pleasure in the 1990s’, in Christine Geraghty and David Lusted (eds) The Television Studies Book. London: Edward Arnold.