Concentration and Diversity Revisited: Production Logics and the U.S. Mainstream Recording Market, 1940–1990

What shapes the diversity of media markets? A literature on the U.S. recording industry offers competing accounts. The cyclical account stresses the negative effect of market concentration, where high concentration dampens diversity. The open system account stresses a mitigated effect, where the log...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social forces 2004-06, Vol.82 (4), p.1411-1455
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description What shapes the diversity of media markets? A literature on the U.S. recording industry offers competing accounts. The cyclical account stresses the negative effect of market concentration, where high concentration dampens diversity. The open system account stresses a mitigated effect, where the logic of decentralized production reduces concentrations negative effect. However, both accounts contain notable gaps. This article fills these gaps and consequently advances this literature. Most notably, it adjudicates these accounts by analyzing time series data on two carriers of diversity: performing acts and recording firms. When decentralized production is low, as in the 1940s, high concentration reduces the number of new performers and new firms. When decentralized production grows more pronounced, as in the 1980s, concentrations negative effect is reduced and eventually eliminated.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Education Source; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Business
Business structures
Coefficients
Decentralization
Diversification
Ecological modeling
Economic aspects
Economic sociology
Economic Systems
Enterprises
Entertainment Industry
Industrial market
Literary criticism
Logic
Market analysis
Markets
Mass media
Media
Modes of production
Multivariate Analysis
Music
Music genres
News Media
Open systems
Performing artists
Performing arts
Popular music
Product labeling
Production
Recording industry
Social aspects
Sociology
Sociology of economy and development
Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
Sociology of leisure and mass culture
Sound recording industry
U.S.A
United States of America
title Concentration and Diversity Revisited: Production Logics and the U.S. Mainstream Recording Market, 1940–1990
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