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"Most media organisations are cutting budgets for overseas reporting. Yet globalisation is making the world ever more inter-dependent. Robertson's book is a fascinating study of how viewers can 'recognise and identify with the distant Others who populate their television screens'. It is essential reading for practitioners as well as scholars." -- James Painter, University of Oxford
"This is a most welcome contribution to the analysis of the place of media discourses within the unfolding process of cultural globalization, and to the literature on cosmopolitanism more generally. This book is a model of organization, which maintains both its focus and its impetus throughout, and which continuously engages the reader with vivid exemplifications of complex moral-cultural debates." -- John Tomlinson, Nottingham Trent University
'Alexa Robertson offers a subtle and nuanced account of television news reporting and its audiences, showing how cosmopolitan sentiments are mediated through televisual storytelling and the popular imagination. A must-read book for all those interested in mass media, culture and politics in an epoch of globalization.' -- Robert Holton, Trinity College Dublin








