Routledge Handbook of Sport Communication
Herausgeber: Pedersen, Paul M
Routledge Handbook of Sport Communication
Herausgeber: Pedersen, Paul M
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The Routledge Handbook of Sport Communication is the only book to offer a fully comprehensive and in-depth survey of the contemporary discipline of sport communication. Including contributions from leading sport media and communications scholars and professionals from around the world, the book examines emerging (new and social) media, traditional (print, broadcast and screen) media, sociological themes in communication in sport, and management issues, at every level, from the interpersonal to communication within and between sport organisations and global institutions. Taking stock of current…mehr
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The Routledge Handbook of Sport Communication is the only book to offer a fully comprehensive and in-depth survey of the contemporary discipline of sport communication. Including contributions from leading sport media and communications scholars and professionals from around the world, the book examines emerging (new and social) media, traditional (print, broadcast and screen) media, sociological themes in communication in sport, and management issues, at every level, from the interpersonal to communication within and between sport organisations and global institutions. Taking stock of current research, new ideas and key issues, this book is an essential reference for any advanced student, researcher or practitioner with an interest in sport communication, sport business, sport management, sport marketing, communication theory, journalism, or media studies.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 530
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. März 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 173mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 957g
- ISBN-13: 9781138916951
- ISBN-10: 1138916951
- Artikelnr.: 42587733
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 530
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. März 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 173mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 957g
- ISBN-13: 9781138916951
- ISBN-10: 1138916951
- Artikelnr.: 42587733
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Paul Pedersen is Professor of Sport Management at Indiana University, USA, and founding editor of the International Journal of Sport Communication.
Introduction Section I: Theoretical and Conceptual Aspects of Sport
Communication 1. Communication Theories and Sport Studies 2. In a Different
Game? Reflections on Sports in the Media as Seen from a Game Perspective 3.
Gender in the Workplace: Using a Post-Structural Approach to Theorize
Diversity in Sports Media Organizations 4. TV Broadcasting: Toward a Pluri-
and Inter-semiotic Approach 5. Sport as a Communication System 6. Social
Media and Sport Communication: Abundant Theoretical Opportunities 7.
Applying Public Relations Theory to Increase the Understanding of Sport
Communication 8. Sport, Analytics, and the Number as a Communication Medium
9. Research Methodologies in Sport Communication 10. Athlete-Media
Communication: A Theoretical Perspective on How Athletes Use and Understand
Gendered Sport Communication Section II: Traditional Media Associated with
Sport Communication 11. A Global Crisis? International Perspectives on the
State of the Print Sport Media 12. Sports Reporting and Journalistic
Principles 13. Chronicling Sport, Branding Institutions: The Television
Sports Documentary from Broadcast to Cable 14. Sports Broadcasting:
History, Technology, and Implications 15. The Glass Ceiling and Beyond:
Tracing the Explanations for Women's Lack of Power in Sports Journalism 16.
Understanding the Biggest Show in Media: What the Olympic Games
Communicates to the World 17. The State of the Sports Press: Reflections on
an International Study 18. The Impact of Sport Publicity on Sport Fans'
Emotion, Future Prediction, and Behavioral Response 19. Television
Broadcast Rights: Still the Golden Goose 20. Defining Fitness
Communication: Conceptualizing an Emerging Segment of the Sport Industry
Section III: Sport Communication and New and Emerging Media 21. The New
World of Social Media and Broadcast Sports Reporting 22. Turning the Page
with Newspapers: Influence of the Internet on Sports Coverage 23. Content,
Copyright, and Carriage: Issues for Sports Media Rights in the Digital Age
24. Subjectivity in 140 Characters: The Use of Social Media by Marginalized
Groups 25. Sport Fandom in the Digital World 26. Emerging Social Media and
Applications in Sport 27. Focus on Fantasy: An Overview of Fantasy Sport
Consumption 28. Using Social Network Analysis in Sport Communication
Research 29. Evaluating Sports Websites from an Information Management
Perspective 30. Communicating Through Sport Video Games Section IV:
Sociological Aspects of Sport Communication 31. Enjoyment from Watching
Mediated Sports: Four Conceptual Frameworks to Understand the Enjoyment
Construct 32. Gender and Sexualities in Sport Media 33. Going Public:
Communicating a Critical Perspective on Sport 34. The Communicative
Complexity of Youth Sport: Maintaining Benefits, Managing Discourses, and
Challenging Identifies 35. The Babe/Baby Factor: Sport, Females, and Mass
Media 36. Best Practices for Media Coverage of Athletes with Disabilities:
A Person-first Language Approach 37. Race Portrayals in Sport Communication
38. Uses of Sport Communication in Groups: Meaning and Effects in Public
Viewing 39. Sport, Celebrity, and the Meaning of Style 40. Media Coverage
of International Sport Section V: The Management of Sport Communication
41. Media, Sport, and Consumer Culture: The Fan as Consumer in Television
Commercials 42. Sport Communication and Social Responsibility 43. For the
Cure, the Kids, and the Cause: Practicing Advocacy through Communication
and Sport 44. The Culture of Communication in Athletics 45. Strategic
Influence and Sport Communication Leaders 46. Communication and Sports
Officials 47. Rapidly Advancing Technology and Policy Choices: Transforming
the Economic Landscape of the Sport Media 48. College Athletic
Communications: Evolution of the Field 49. Dangerous Currents: How PR and
Advertising Influence Sports Reporting and Cause Ethical Problems 50.
Critical Perspectives in Sports Public Relations
Communication 1. Communication Theories and Sport Studies 2. In a Different
Game? Reflections on Sports in the Media as Seen from a Game Perspective 3.
Gender in the Workplace: Using a Post-Structural Approach to Theorize
Diversity in Sports Media Organizations 4. TV Broadcasting: Toward a Pluri-
and Inter-semiotic Approach 5. Sport as a Communication System 6. Social
Media and Sport Communication: Abundant Theoretical Opportunities 7.
Applying Public Relations Theory to Increase the Understanding of Sport
Communication 8. Sport, Analytics, and the Number as a Communication Medium
9. Research Methodologies in Sport Communication 10. Athlete-Media
Communication: A Theoretical Perspective on How Athletes Use and Understand
Gendered Sport Communication Section II: Traditional Media Associated with
Sport Communication 11. A Global Crisis? International Perspectives on the
State of the Print Sport Media 12. Sports Reporting and Journalistic
Principles 13. Chronicling Sport, Branding Institutions: The Television
Sports Documentary from Broadcast to Cable 14. Sports Broadcasting:
History, Technology, and Implications 15. The Glass Ceiling and Beyond:
Tracing the Explanations for Women's Lack of Power in Sports Journalism 16.
Understanding the Biggest Show in Media: What the Olympic Games
Communicates to the World 17. The State of the Sports Press: Reflections on
an International Study 18. The Impact of Sport Publicity on Sport Fans'
Emotion, Future Prediction, and Behavioral Response 19. Television
Broadcast Rights: Still the Golden Goose 20. Defining Fitness
Communication: Conceptualizing an Emerging Segment of the Sport Industry
Section III: Sport Communication and New and Emerging Media 21. The New
World of Social Media and Broadcast Sports Reporting 22. Turning the Page
with Newspapers: Influence of the Internet on Sports Coverage 23. Content,
Copyright, and Carriage: Issues for Sports Media Rights in the Digital Age
24. Subjectivity in 140 Characters: The Use of Social Media by Marginalized
Groups 25. Sport Fandom in the Digital World 26. Emerging Social Media and
Applications in Sport 27. Focus on Fantasy: An Overview of Fantasy Sport
Consumption 28. Using Social Network Analysis in Sport Communication
Research 29. Evaluating Sports Websites from an Information Management
Perspective 30. Communicating Through Sport Video Games Section IV:
Sociological Aspects of Sport Communication 31. Enjoyment from Watching
Mediated Sports: Four Conceptual Frameworks to Understand the Enjoyment
Construct 32. Gender and Sexualities in Sport Media 33. Going Public:
Communicating a Critical Perspective on Sport 34. The Communicative
Complexity of Youth Sport: Maintaining Benefits, Managing Discourses, and
Challenging Identifies 35. The Babe/Baby Factor: Sport, Females, and Mass
Media 36. Best Practices for Media Coverage of Athletes with Disabilities:
A Person-first Language Approach 37. Race Portrayals in Sport Communication
38. Uses of Sport Communication in Groups: Meaning and Effects in Public
Viewing 39. Sport, Celebrity, and the Meaning of Style 40. Media Coverage
of International Sport Section V: The Management of Sport Communication
41. Media, Sport, and Consumer Culture: The Fan as Consumer in Television
Commercials 42. Sport Communication and Social Responsibility 43. For the
Cure, the Kids, and the Cause: Practicing Advocacy through Communication
and Sport 44. The Culture of Communication in Athletics 45. Strategic
Influence and Sport Communication Leaders 46. Communication and Sports
Officials 47. Rapidly Advancing Technology and Policy Choices: Transforming
the Economic Landscape of the Sport Media 48. College Athletic
Communications: Evolution of the Field 49. Dangerous Currents: How PR and
Advertising Influence Sports Reporting and Cause Ethical Problems 50.
Critical Perspectives in Sports Public Relations
Introduction Section I: Theoretical and Conceptual Aspects of Sport
Communication 1. Communication Theories and Sport Studies 2. In a Different
Game? Reflections on Sports in the Media as Seen from a Game Perspective 3.
Gender in the Workplace: Using a Post-Structural Approach to Theorize
Diversity in Sports Media Organizations 4. TV Broadcasting: Toward a Pluri-
and Inter-semiotic Approach 5. Sport as a Communication System 6. Social
Media and Sport Communication: Abundant Theoretical Opportunities 7.
Applying Public Relations Theory to Increase the Understanding of Sport
Communication 8. Sport, Analytics, and the Number as a Communication Medium
9. Research Methodologies in Sport Communication 10. Athlete-Media
Communication: A Theoretical Perspective on How Athletes Use and Understand
Gendered Sport Communication Section II: Traditional Media Associated with
Sport Communication 11. A Global Crisis? International Perspectives on the
State of the Print Sport Media 12. Sports Reporting and Journalistic
Principles 13. Chronicling Sport, Branding Institutions: The Television
Sports Documentary from Broadcast to Cable 14. Sports Broadcasting:
History, Technology, and Implications 15. The Glass Ceiling and Beyond:
Tracing the Explanations for Women's Lack of Power in Sports Journalism 16.
Understanding the Biggest Show in Media: What the Olympic Games
Communicates to the World 17. The State of the Sports Press: Reflections on
an International Study 18. The Impact of Sport Publicity on Sport Fans'
Emotion, Future Prediction, and Behavioral Response 19. Television
Broadcast Rights: Still the Golden Goose 20. Defining Fitness
Communication: Conceptualizing an Emerging Segment of the Sport Industry
Section III: Sport Communication and New and Emerging Media 21. The New
World of Social Media and Broadcast Sports Reporting 22. Turning the Page
with Newspapers: Influence of the Internet on Sports Coverage 23. Content,
Copyright, and Carriage: Issues for Sports Media Rights in the Digital Age
24. Subjectivity in 140 Characters: The Use of Social Media by Marginalized
Groups 25. Sport Fandom in the Digital World 26. Emerging Social Media and
Applications in Sport 27. Focus on Fantasy: An Overview of Fantasy Sport
Consumption 28. Using Social Network Analysis in Sport Communication
Research 29. Evaluating Sports Websites from an Information Management
Perspective 30. Communicating Through Sport Video Games Section IV:
Sociological Aspects of Sport Communication 31. Enjoyment from Watching
Mediated Sports: Four Conceptual Frameworks to Understand the Enjoyment
Construct 32. Gender and Sexualities in Sport Media 33. Going Public:
Communicating a Critical Perspective on Sport 34. The Communicative
Complexity of Youth Sport: Maintaining Benefits, Managing Discourses, and
Challenging Identifies 35. The Babe/Baby Factor: Sport, Females, and Mass
Media 36. Best Practices for Media Coverage of Athletes with Disabilities:
A Person-first Language Approach 37. Race Portrayals in Sport Communication
38. Uses of Sport Communication in Groups: Meaning and Effects in Public
Viewing 39. Sport, Celebrity, and the Meaning of Style 40. Media Coverage
of International Sport Section V: The Management of Sport Communication
41. Media, Sport, and Consumer Culture: The Fan as Consumer in Television
Commercials 42. Sport Communication and Social Responsibility 43. For the
Cure, the Kids, and the Cause: Practicing Advocacy through Communication
and Sport 44. The Culture of Communication in Athletics 45. Strategic
Influence and Sport Communication Leaders 46. Communication and Sports
Officials 47. Rapidly Advancing Technology and Policy Choices: Transforming
the Economic Landscape of the Sport Media 48. College Athletic
Communications: Evolution of the Field 49. Dangerous Currents: How PR and
Advertising Influence Sports Reporting and Cause Ethical Problems 50.
Critical Perspectives in Sports Public Relations
Communication 1. Communication Theories and Sport Studies 2. In a Different
Game? Reflections on Sports in the Media as Seen from a Game Perspective 3.
Gender in the Workplace: Using a Post-Structural Approach to Theorize
Diversity in Sports Media Organizations 4. TV Broadcasting: Toward a Pluri-
and Inter-semiotic Approach 5. Sport as a Communication System 6. Social
Media and Sport Communication: Abundant Theoretical Opportunities 7.
Applying Public Relations Theory to Increase the Understanding of Sport
Communication 8. Sport, Analytics, and the Number as a Communication Medium
9. Research Methodologies in Sport Communication 10. Athlete-Media
Communication: A Theoretical Perspective on How Athletes Use and Understand
Gendered Sport Communication Section II: Traditional Media Associated with
Sport Communication 11. A Global Crisis? International Perspectives on the
State of the Print Sport Media 12. Sports Reporting and Journalistic
Principles 13. Chronicling Sport, Branding Institutions: The Television
Sports Documentary from Broadcast to Cable 14. Sports Broadcasting:
History, Technology, and Implications 15. The Glass Ceiling and Beyond:
Tracing the Explanations for Women's Lack of Power in Sports Journalism 16.
Understanding the Biggest Show in Media: What the Olympic Games
Communicates to the World 17. The State of the Sports Press: Reflections on
an International Study 18. The Impact of Sport Publicity on Sport Fans'
Emotion, Future Prediction, and Behavioral Response 19. Television
Broadcast Rights: Still the Golden Goose 20. Defining Fitness
Communication: Conceptualizing an Emerging Segment of the Sport Industry
Section III: Sport Communication and New and Emerging Media 21. The New
World of Social Media and Broadcast Sports Reporting 22. Turning the Page
with Newspapers: Influence of the Internet on Sports Coverage 23. Content,
Copyright, and Carriage: Issues for Sports Media Rights in the Digital Age
24. Subjectivity in 140 Characters: The Use of Social Media by Marginalized
Groups 25. Sport Fandom in the Digital World 26. Emerging Social Media and
Applications in Sport 27. Focus on Fantasy: An Overview of Fantasy Sport
Consumption 28. Using Social Network Analysis in Sport Communication
Research 29. Evaluating Sports Websites from an Information Management
Perspective 30. Communicating Through Sport Video Games Section IV:
Sociological Aspects of Sport Communication 31. Enjoyment from Watching
Mediated Sports: Four Conceptual Frameworks to Understand the Enjoyment
Construct 32. Gender and Sexualities in Sport Media 33. Going Public:
Communicating a Critical Perspective on Sport 34. The Communicative
Complexity of Youth Sport: Maintaining Benefits, Managing Discourses, and
Challenging Identifies 35. The Babe/Baby Factor: Sport, Females, and Mass
Media 36. Best Practices for Media Coverage of Athletes with Disabilities:
A Person-first Language Approach 37. Race Portrayals in Sport Communication
38. Uses of Sport Communication in Groups: Meaning and Effects in Public
Viewing 39. Sport, Celebrity, and the Meaning of Style 40. Media Coverage
of International Sport Section V: The Management of Sport Communication
41. Media, Sport, and Consumer Culture: The Fan as Consumer in Television
Commercials 42. Sport Communication and Social Responsibility 43. For the
Cure, the Kids, and the Cause: Practicing Advocacy through Communication
and Sport 44. The Culture of Communication in Athletics 45. Strategic
Influence and Sport Communication Leaders 46. Communication and Sports
Officials 47. Rapidly Advancing Technology and Policy Choices: Transforming
the Economic Landscape of the Sport Media 48. College Athletic
Communications: Evolution of the Field 49. Dangerous Currents: How PR and
Advertising Influence Sports Reporting and Cause Ethical Problems 50.
Critical Perspectives in Sports Public Relations