“…A final and representative area of transnational feminist media scholarship that should also be mentioned is audience research-in particular how transnational practices of media consumption invite us to rethink 264 R. Shome notions such as "audience," "reception," and "spectatorship" (Durham, 2004;Ganguly, 1992;LaPastina, 2004;Maira, 2000Maira, , 2002Moorti, 2000;Parameswaran, 2003b;Sreberny, 2001;Valdivia, 2000Valdivia, , 2003Zacharias, 2003, among others). Influenced by trends in post-colonial theory and transnational cultural studies, in which the very notion of "the people" as a homogenous stable group, rooted firmly in a singular ethnicity, geography, nation, or imagination, has been widely challenged, transnational feminist scholars invite us to recognize how contemporary conditions of mobilities and immobilities, cultural flows and stasis, produce new hybrid spaces (and practices) of consumption that productively throw into crisis any notion of the audience as being a culturally stable and predictable object.…”