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By examining the parallel worlds of media and public opinion, Power of Scandal uses an alternative heuristic for understanding mass communication that is both rigorous and sophisticated.
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By examining the parallel worlds of media and public opinion, Power of Scandal uses an alternative heuristic for understanding mass communication that is both rigorous and sophisticated.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 432
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 160mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781442641259
- ISBN-10: 1442641258
- Artikelnr.: 28196390
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 432
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 160mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781442641259
- ISBN-10: 1442641258
- Artikelnr.: 28196390
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Johannes Ehrat is a professor extraordinarius in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Pontificia Università Gregoriana.
Preface
PART 1: A Theoretical Approach to the Nature of Media Scandal
1. How Scandal Research tends to treat the Achievement of Media Scandals
2. Scandal as Logic: Ideal and Sanction
3. Scandal as industrial Product and institutional Practice
4. Media scandals and what they are not
5. Video-truths
6. Comprehending Media Scandals from Media
7. Publicity Narrative as Precondition of Scandals
PART 2: What is Publicity, the Public Sphere?
1. Publicity as methodological Construct
2. Publicity as Simulacrum
3. Publicity and Meaning as Subsistence
4. Semiotic as Theory of formal and concrete Meaning
PART 3: Semiotic of Publicity
1. Publicity as Teleology
2. Legitimacy
3. Public Opinion as historical-cultural role relation
4. Public Opinion as Theatre
5. Public Opinion operates by constructing the Role of Enunciation
Instance
PART 4: Publicity in Media Theory
1. Media functional or semiotic?
2. Is there a Need for a separate Semiotic Media Theory?
3. Signs of Society
4. Functions of the Three Correlates in the Media Sign
5. Technological Determination or Sign Process: the case of
Televangelism
6. Godcasting: Meaning Apparatuses of Religious Self-display
PART 5: From Jubilation to Scandal
1. Religious Meaning outside of Public Opinion
2. Television Studies and Aesthetic Form
3. Media Construction of Religious Space and Time
4. The 'Call Forward'
5. Witnessing
6. PrayTV yields to PreyTV: Acts of Televangelist Authority
7. Primordial Scandal Religion
PART 6: Judgement: Bringing into a Scandal-Position
1. Scandal Technique
2. Investigative Journalism and Objectivity
3. Metatexts: Simplifying Sanctions in Public Opinion Texts
4. Metatext I: The Permission to Act
5. Metatext II: The Scale of Self-Realisation
6. Deduction of Classes of Scandal
7. Scandal of Destination
8. Scandal of Action
PART 7: The Course of the Scandal Pro-Gramme
1. Media Scandal Methods
2. Event: How Destination in the Shanley story created the Scandal
3. The role structure of the Shanley-story
4. Two discursive Scandal Constructions
5. Reality: News Practice between Reality Determination and satirical
alienation
PART 8: Effect and Reality of Scandal
1. Scandal as Objectivity Effect
2. Objective Scandal Effects
3. Scandal as Effect
4. Critique of Subjectivity Approaches and Functionalism
5. Scandal Effect as Semiotic
6. Institutions as pragmatic Predetermination of Purpose
7. De-Legitimization of an Institution as Purpose of Media Scandals
Conclusion
Index
Bibliography
PART 1: A Theoretical Approach to the Nature of Media Scandal
1. How Scandal Research tends to treat the Achievement of Media Scandals
2. Scandal as Logic: Ideal and Sanction
3. Scandal as industrial Product and institutional Practice
4. Media scandals and what they are not
5. Video-truths
6. Comprehending Media Scandals from Media
7. Publicity Narrative as Precondition of Scandals
PART 2: What is Publicity, the Public Sphere?
1. Publicity as methodological Construct
2. Publicity as Simulacrum
3. Publicity and Meaning as Subsistence
4. Semiotic as Theory of formal and concrete Meaning
PART 3: Semiotic of Publicity
1. Publicity as Teleology
2. Legitimacy
3. Public Opinion as historical-cultural role relation
4. Public Opinion as Theatre
5. Public Opinion operates by constructing the Role of Enunciation
Instance
PART 4: Publicity in Media Theory
1. Media functional or semiotic?
2. Is there a Need for a separate Semiotic Media Theory?
3. Signs of Society
4. Functions of the Three Correlates in the Media Sign
5. Technological Determination or Sign Process: the case of
Televangelism
6. Godcasting: Meaning Apparatuses of Religious Self-display
PART 5: From Jubilation to Scandal
1. Religious Meaning outside of Public Opinion
2. Television Studies and Aesthetic Form
3. Media Construction of Religious Space and Time
4. The 'Call Forward'
5. Witnessing
6. PrayTV yields to PreyTV: Acts of Televangelist Authority
7. Primordial Scandal Religion
PART 6: Judgement: Bringing into a Scandal-Position
1. Scandal Technique
2. Investigative Journalism and Objectivity
3. Metatexts: Simplifying Sanctions in Public Opinion Texts
4. Metatext I: The Permission to Act
5. Metatext II: The Scale of Self-Realisation
6. Deduction of Classes of Scandal
7. Scandal of Destination
8. Scandal of Action
PART 7: The Course of the Scandal Pro-Gramme
1. Media Scandal Methods
2. Event: How Destination in the Shanley story created the Scandal
3. The role structure of the Shanley-story
4. Two discursive Scandal Constructions
5. Reality: News Practice between Reality Determination and satirical
alienation
PART 8: Effect and Reality of Scandal
1. Scandal as Objectivity Effect
2. Objective Scandal Effects
3. Scandal as Effect
4. Critique of Subjectivity Approaches and Functionalism
5. Scandal Effect as Semiotic
6. Institutions as pragmatic Predetermination of Purpose
7. De-Legitimization of an Institution as Purpose of Media Scandals
Conclusion
Index
Bibliography
Preface
PART 1: A Theoretical Approach to the Nature of Media Scandal
1. How Scandal Research tends to treat the Achievement of Media Scandals
2. Scandal as Logic: Ideal and Sanction
3. Scandal as industrial Product and institutional Practice
4. Media scandals and what they are not
5. Video-truths
6. Comprehending Media Scandals from Media
7. Publicity Narrative as Precondition of Scandals
PART 2: What is Publicity, the Public Sphere?
1. Publicity as methodological Construct
2. Publicity as Simulacrum
3. Publicity and Meaning as Subsistence
4. Semiotic as Theory of formal and concrete Meaning
PART 3: Semiotic of Publicity
1. Publicity as Teleology
2. Legitimacy
3. Public Opinion as historical-cultural role relation
4. Public Opinion as Theatre
5. Public Opinion operates by constructing the Role of Enunciation
Instance
PART 4: Publicity in Media Theory
1. Media functional or semiotic?
2. Is there a Need for a separate Semiotic Media Theory?
3. Signs of Society
4. Functions of the Three Correlates in the Media Sign
5. Technological Determination or Sign Process: the case of
Televangelism
6. Godcasting: Meaning Apparatuses of Religious Self-display
PART 5: From Jubilation to Scandal
1. Religious Meaning outside of Public Opinion
2. Television Studies and Aesthetic Form
3. Media Construction of Religious Space and Time
4. The 'Call Forward'
5. Witnessing
6. PrayTV yields to PreyTV: Acts of Televangelist Authority
7. Primordial Scandal Religion
PART 6: Judgement: Bringing into a Scandal-Position
1. Scandal Technique
2. Investigative Journalism and Objectivity
3. Metatexts: Simplifying Sanctions in Public Opinion Texts
4. Metatext I: The Permission to Act
5. Metatext II: The Scale of Self-Realisation
6. Deduction of Classes of Scandal
7. Scandal of Destination
8. Scandal of Action
PART 7: The Course of the Scandal Pro-Gramme
1. Media Scandal Methods
2. Event: How Destination in the Shanley story created the Scandal
3. The role structure of the Shanley-story
4. Two discursive Scandal Constructions
5. Reality: News Practice between Reality Determination and satirical
alienation
PART 8: Effect and Reality of Scandal
1. Scandal as Objectivity Effect
2. Objective Scandal Effects
3. Scandal as Effect
4. Critique of Subjectivity Approaches and Functionalism
5. Scandal Effect as Semiotic
6. Institutions as pragmatic Predetermination of Purpose
7. De-Legitimization of an Institution as Purpose of Media Scandals
Conclusion
Index
Bibliography
PART 1: A Theoretical Approach to the Nature of Media Scandal
1. How Scandal Research tends to treat the Achievement of Media Scandals
2. Scandal as Logic: Ideal and Sanction
3. Scandal as industrial Product and institutional Practice
4. Media scandals and what they are not
5. Video-truths
6. Comprehending Media Scandals from Media
7. Publicity Narrative as Precondition of Scandals
PART 2: What is Publicity, the Public Sphere?
1. Publicity as methodological Construct
2. Publicity as Simulacrum
3. Publicity and Meaning as Subsistence
4. Semiotic as Theory of formal and concrete Meaning
PART 3: Semiotic of Publicity
1. Publicity as Teleology
2. Legitimacy
3. Public Opinion as historical-cultural role relation
4. Public Opinion as Theatre
5. Public Opinion operates by constructing the Role of Enunciation
Instance
PART 4: Publicity in Media Theory
1. Media functional or semiotic?
2. Is there a Need for a separate Semiotic Media Theory?
3. Signs of Society
4. Functions of the Three Correlates in the Media Sign
5. Technological Determination or Sign Process: the case of
Televangelism
6. Godcasting: Meaning Apparatuses of Religious Self-display
PART 5: From Jubilation to Scandal
1. Religious Meaning outside of Public Opinion
2. Television Studies and Aesthetic Form
3. Media Construction of Religious Space and Time
4. The 'Call Forward'
5. Witnessing
6. PrayTV yields to PreyTV: Acts of Televangelist Authority
7. Primordial Scandal Religion
PART 6: Judgement: Bringing into a Scandal-Position
1. Scandal Technique
2. Investigative Journalism and Objectivity
3. Metatexts: Simplifying Sanctions in Public Opinion Texts
4. Metatext I: The Permission to Act
5. Metatext II: The Scale of Self-Realisation
6. Deduction of Classes of Scandal
7. Scandal of Destination
8. Scandal of Action
PART 7: The Course of the Scandal Pro-Gramme
1. Media Scandal Methods
2. Event: How Destination in the Shanley story created the Scandal
3. The role structure of the Shanley-story
4. Two discursive Scandal Constructions
5. Reality: News Practice between Reality Determination and satirical
alienation
PART 8: Effect and Reality of Scandal
1. Scandal as Objectivity Effect
2. Objective Scandal Effects
3. Scandal as Effect
4. Critique of Subjectivity Approaches and Functionalism
5. Scandal Effect as Semiotic
6. Institutions as pragmatic Predetermination of Purpose
7. De-Legitimization of an Institution as Purpose of Media Scandals
Conclusion
Index
Bibliography