Faculty



 

Media Studies

Bryant, Mark
Frick, Caroline
Fuller, Jennifer
Gopalan, Lalitha
Jennings, Steve
Kackman, Michael
Kearney, Mary Celeste
Kumar, Shanti
Mallapragada, Madhavi
McLeland, Susan
Pennycook, Bruce
Ramirez Berg, Charles
Rodriguez, America
Schatz, Tom
Sebok, Bryan
Staiger, Janet
Stein, Laura
Straubhaar, Joe
Strover, Sharon
Tyner, Kathleen
Watkins, S. Craig
Wilkins, Karin
 

Production & Screenwriting

Akel, Mike
Blood, John
Burton, Toddy
Dietz, Steven
Douglas, Sam
Foshko, Robert
Garrison, Andrew
Henry, Kyle
Howard, Don
Jacobs, Matthew
Kelban, Stuart
Kelly, Susan
Knight, Dan
Kocher, Karen
Krukowski, Samantha
Lewis, Anne
Lewis, Richard
Mader, Berndt
Marslett, Geoff
Mims, Steve
Orillion, Kathleen
Panov, Mitko
Parsons, Spencer
Pennycook, Bruce
Pierson, John
Ramirez Berg, Charles
Rice, Scott
Schiesari, Nancy
Shea, Andrew
Smith, Alex
Smith, Ya'Ke
Spiro, Ellen
Stavchansky, Arie
Steinbauer, Ben
Stekler, Paul
Stone, Allucquere Rosanne
Thorne, Beau
Zander Mason, Diane

Joe Straubhaar

Amon G. Carter Centennial Professor of Communication & Graduate Advisor

Joe Straubhaar

E-mail: jdstraubhaar@mail.utexas.edu
Office: CMA 6.120
Phone: 512-471-5304
Ph.D., Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 1981.

Professor Joseph D. Straubhaar is the Amon G. Carter Centennial Professor of Communications in the Department of Radio-TV-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also Associate Director for International Programs of the Telecommunication and Information Policy Institute at the University of Texas. He was the Director of the Center for Brazilian Studies within the Lozano Long Institute for Latin American Studies, 2003-2006.

His primary teaching, research and writing interests are in global media, international communication and cultural theory, information societies and the digital divide in the U. S. and other countries, and global television production and flow. His graduate teaching includes media theory, global media, comparative media systems, international telecommunications systems, Latin American media, and research methods. His undergraduate teaching covers the same range plus introduction to mass communication and the information society. He does research in Brazil, other Latin America countries, Europe, Asia and Africa, and has taken student groups to Latin America and Asia. He has done seminars abroad on media research, television programming strategies, and telecommunications privatization. He is on the editorial board for the Howard Journal of Communication, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, and Revista INTERCOM.

His book, World Television from Global to Local, will be published by Sage in May 2007. A revised 5th edition of his textbook with Bob LaRose, Media Now, will be published in June 2007. He has an edited book, The Persistence of Inequity in the Technopolis: Race, Class and the Digital Divide in Austin, Texas, forthcoming from University of Texas Press. He had an edited book with Othon Jambeiro, Políticas de informação e comunicação, jornalismo e inclusão digital: O Local e o Global em Austin e Salvador (Information and communication policy, journalism and digital inclusion: The local and global in Austin and Salvador); Federal University of Bahia Press: 2005.

Recent articles and book chapters include:

“Broadcast Research in the Americas: Revisiting the Past and Looking to the Future. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Vol. 50(3), 368-382, September 2006.

“Multiple Proximities between Television Genres and Audiences: The Schism between Telenovelas’ Global Distribution and Local Consumption.” Gazette. 67(3): 271-288.

“(Re)asserting National Media and National Identity Against the Global, Regional and Local Levels of World Television.” In Meenakshi Gigi Durham and Doug Kellner, Eds. Media and cultural studies: Keyworks, Revised Edition. Malden, Mass. Blackwell Publishers, 2005.

“The centrality of telenovelas in Latin America life: Past tendencies, current knowledge, and future research.” Global Media Journal, Vol. 2, Spring 2003.

“Choosing National TV: Cultural Capital, Language, and Cultural Proximity in Brazil.” In Michael Elasmar, ed. The Impact of International Television: A Paradigm Shift. Lawrence Earlbaum Associates, 2003.

He has published numerous articles and essays on global media, digital inclusion, Brazilian television, Latin American media, comparative analyses of new television technologies, media flow and culture, and other topics appearing in a number of journals, edited books, and elsewhere.

    

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