Economics of Culture Industry: Television in India

In stock

Free & Quick Delivery Worldwide

Television, the magic box, which occupies a prominent place in the living rooms, entertains people practically all the twenty-four hours of the day through its programmes. By providing employment to millions of people and generating substantial volume of income, it has grown as a major economic activity in almost all the countries including India, since its invention during the middle of twentieth century. As an activity, it finds a place within the contours of culture industry in which cultural genres and economic norms are fused together by technology. Television resorts to a dual product marketing system, by which it manages to supply its products to the audience invariably as a free good and earn a substantial volume of income by selling its air time to the advertisers. The book may evoke keen interest not only among the researchers, but also those associated with TV Industry and policy making.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR K V Joseph

K.V. Joseph is a scholar of repute who has written Economics of Film Industry in India, Migration and Economic Development of Kerala, Economics of Indian Cinema, Culture and Industrial Development: the Indian Experience, Keralites on the Move, Nazaranikalude Sampathika yathangal (Mal) and many research papers and articles. The winner of the prestigious Raja Sir Ramaswamy medal from the University of Madras, Dr. Joseph was Professor of Economics, in St. Xavier's College, Thumba, Trivandrum. He was a Senior Fellow of the ICSSR during 1993-95 and also of the ICHR during1996-98.

reviews

0 in total

There are no reviews yet.

Bibliographic information

Title
Economics of Culture Industry: Television in India
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
9788175415652
Length
xvi+206p., 23cm.
Subjects