Publication | Closed Access
Cultural Proximity and Audience Behavior: The Role of Language in Patterns of Polarization and Multicultural Fluency
75
Citations
15
References
2008
Year
EthnicityMedia PreferencesCultural RelationEducationUs CultureCultural FactorCommunicationMedia StudiesSocial MediaCultural DiversityCultural ProximityCultural PolarizationCultural FluencyCross-cultural IssueMulticultural FluencySociolinguisticsCultural ImpactCultural SensitivityCultureMulticultural CommunicationLanguage DiversityIntercultural CommunicationAudience BehaviorArts
Cultural proximity is a multidimensional concept, most often used to explain media preferences across national boundaries. The present study extends the construct, revealing its power to explain audience formation within a multicultural society. Portable People Meter data from Arbitron, Inc., was used to compare patterns of television and radio use across Spanish-speaking Hispanics, English-speaking Hispanics, and non-Hispanics in Houston, Texas. The results indicate that language preferences play a powerful role in determining audience behavior. Furthermore, while English-speaking Hispanics exhibit multicultural fluency, the other two populations show evidence of cultural polarization.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1