Symbiotic transformations: youth, global media and indigenous culture in Malta
- Joe Grixti
- Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand, j.a.grixti@massey.ac.nz
Source
doi: 10.1177/0163443706059295 Media Culture Society January 2006 vol. 28 no. 1 105-122
Abstract
The article explores the impact of global
commercial media on young people’s developing
perceptions of their
own cultural identity. It works
from the premise that local cultures are not so much getting replaced by
‘global culture’ as inflecting it by coexisting
with it. The discussion draws on data collected in the
course
of focus group interviews with
young adults living in the Mediterranean island of Malta, in order to
stress
the specificity with which young
people from different cultural contexts consume global
media.
I argue that, as in other postcolonial communities,
though the choices available to Maltese youth have
become
strongly inflected (or
‘hybridized’) by the commercial imperatives of global media, the
ways
in which they are appropriated and played out
retain very idiosyncratic characteristics, which mark
them out
as uniquely Maltese.
Keywords
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