Global Cultures in Transition

Global Cultures in Transition is a research initiative affiliated with the Center for Information Technology and Society at UCSB. Rather than assume that the globalization of information technologies “flattens” or equalizes socio-economic relations around the world, researchers in this initiative explore the differences and disparities across various societies and cultures. The group is comprised of scholars and graduate students in the humanities and social sciences who are working to develop multidisciplinary methods for studying and visualizing the emergence and impact of information technologies upon societies and cultures in different parts of the world.

The initiative brings together media scholars, anthropologists, sociologists, geographers, and digital artists in an effort to create new paradigms for researching the dynamic interplay of information technologies and global cultures. Members of the project explore the formation and study the effects of large-scale transnational infrastructures such as satellite, web, and wireless systems as well as localized uses of those systems within particular urban and rural environments. The group focuses especially on areas that have undergone major economic, technological, and cultural transformations in the wake of globalization and other historic events. Members of the group have conducted fieldwork in Central and South America, Europe, China, and Mongolia and will return to these and other regions as the initiative develops. Members of the project are committed to understanding and exposing differences across cultures rather than offering universal claims about the role of information technologies in the world.

Publications

As the Earth Spins: NBC’s Wide Wide World and Live Global Television in the 1950s

Parks, L. (2001). "As the Earth Spins: NBC’s Wide Wide World and Live Global Television in the 1950s." Screen. 42:4.

Satellitenbilder Suchen

Parks, L. (2001). Satellitenbilder Suchen. Suchbilder. Wolfgang Ernst, Stefan Heidenreich, and Ute Holl (Eds). Berlin: Bildarchive der Gegenwart.

Our World, Satellite Televisuality and the Fantasy of Global Presence

Parks, L. (2002). Our World, Satellite Televisuality and the Fantasy of Global Presence. Planet TV: A Global Television Reader. Lisa Parks and Shantie Kumar (Eds). New York: New York University Press.

Kinetic Screens: Epistemologies of Movement at the Interface

Parks, L. (2003). "Kinetic Screens: Epistemologies of Movement at the Interface." In Media/Space: Place, Scale, and Culture in a Media Age. Nick Couldry and Anna McCarthy (Eds). London, UK: Routledge.

Cultures in Orbit: Satellites and the Televisual

Parks, L. (2003). Cultures in Orbit: Satellites and the Televisual. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Falling Apart: Electronics Salvaging and the Global Media Economy

Parks, L. (2005). "Falling Apart: Electronics Salvaging and the Global Media Economy." In Residual Media. C. Acland (Ed). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Planet Patrol: Satellite Images, Acts of Knowledge, and Global Security

Parks, L. (2005). "Planet Patrol: Satellite Images, Acts of Knowledge, and Global Security." In Mediale Identitätsräume, B. Hipfl, E. Klaus & U. Scheer (Eds). Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag.

Where the Cable Ends: Television Beyond Fringe Areas

Parks, L. (2005). Where the Cable Ends: Television Beyond Fringe Areas. In Cable Visions. C. Chris & A. Freitas (Eds). New York, NY: New York University Press.

Flexible Microcasting: Gender, Generation, and Television and Internet Convergence

Parks, L. 2003. "Flexible Microcasting: Gender, Generation, and Television and Internet Convergence." In The Persistence of Television: From Console to Computer, Lynn Spigel, ed. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Pp. 133-156.

Plotting the Personal: Global Positioning Satellites and Interactive Media

Parks, L. 2003. "Plotting the Personal: Global Positioning Satellites and Interactive Media." Ecumene: A Journal of Cultural Geographies. 9:2, 209-222.