The Liquefaction of Publicness
Communication, Democracy and the Public Sphere in the Internet Age
Herausgeber: Splichal, Slavko
The Liquefaction of Publicness
Communication, Democracy and the Public Sphere in the Internet Age
Herausgeber: Splichal, Slavko
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This book celebrates the 25th anniversary of the journal Javnost - The Public, bringing together topical discussions in contemporary media and communication research.
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This book celebrates the 25th anniversary of the journal Javnost - The Public, bringing together topical discussions in contemporary media and communication research.
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: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 270
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 150mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780367586539
- ISBN-10: 0367586533
- Artikelnr.: 69893831
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 270
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 150mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780367586539
- ISBN-10: 0367586533
- Artikelnr.: 69893831
Slavko Splichal is Professor of Communication and Public Opinion in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia and a fellow of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia. He is Founder and Director of the European Institute for Communication and Culture and Editor of its journal Javnost - The Public.
Part I: Publicness and the Public Sphere in the Internet Age 1.
Publicness-Privateness: The Liquefaction of "The Great Dichotomy" 2.
Debunking Deference: The Delusions of Unmediated Reality in the
Contemporary Public Sphere 3. Media, Knowledge and Trust: The Deepening
Epistemic Crisis of Democracy 4. Fake Democracy: The Limits of Public
Sphere Theory 5. Visibility and the Public Sphere: A Normative
Conceptualisation 6. Refeudalisation Revisited: The Destruction of
Deliberative Democracy 7. Standpoint, Mediation and the Working-Class
Public Sphere 8. Dissonant and Disconnected Public Spheres as Challenge for
Political Communication Research 9. A Youth-Driven Virtual Civic Public
Sphere for the Arab World 10. Family Feud: Who's Still Fighting about Dewey
and Lippmann? Part II: Democracy and the Crisis of Public Communication
11. The Crisis of Public Communication, 1995-2017 12. Democracy and the
Internet: A Retrospective 13. Post-Globalisation 14. Modern Political
Communication and Web 2.0 in Representative Democracies 15. Revisiting
Digital News Audiences with a Political Magnifying Glass 16. Translation as
Politics 17. The Alt-Right as a Community of Discourse 18. Post-Communism,
Democratisation and the Media: (Nearly) Thirty Years On 19. Putin's Slangy
Newspeak as a Paradox of His Public Communication 20. Digital Media,
Contentious Politics and Party Systems in Italy and Spain 21. The Detached
Observer: On a Necessary Change to the Self-Image of Journalists in the
Digital World Part III: Communication and Media Research in Scientific and
Social Practice 22. The Double Hermeneutics of Communication Research 23.
Fast-Capitalist Veils from Communication Theory for "The Public" and Its
"Discourse" 24. Reframing the Paradox of Pluralism as a Communication
Problem 25. New Technologies, Old Questions: The Enduring Issues of
Communications Research 26. A Critical Perspective on the Post-Internet
World 27. Communication Research: Resignation or Optimism? 28. On Human
Communication 29. Studying Political Economies of Communication in the
Twenty-First Century 30. Expanding the Epistemological Horizon:
Institutionalised Visual Knowledge and Human Rights 31. Researching Fake
News: A Selective Examination of Empirical Studies 32. Gendering Media
Policy Research and Communication Governance
Publicness-Privateness: The Liquefaction of "The Great Dichotomy" 2.
Debunking Deference: The Delusions of Unmediated Reality in the
Contemporary Public Sphere 3. Media, Knowledge and Trust: The Deepening
Epistemic Crisis of Democracy 4. Fake Democracy: The Limits of Public
Sphere Theory 5. Visibility and the Public Sphere: A Normative
Conceptualisation 6. Refeudalisation Revisited: The Destruction of
Deliberative Democracy 7. Standpoint, Mediation and the Working-Class
Public Sphere 8. Dissonant and Disconnected Public Spheres as Challenge for
Political Communication Research 9. A Youth-Driven Virtual Civic Public
Sphere for the Arab World 10. Family Feud: Who's Still Fighting about Dewey
and Lippmann? Part II: Democracy and the Crisis of Public Communication
11. The Crisis of Public Communication, 1995-2017 12. Democracy and the
Internet: A Retrospective 13. Post-Globalisation 14. Modern Political
Communication and Web 2.0 in Representative Democracies 15. Revisiting
Digital News Audiences with a Political Magnifying Glass 16. Translation as
Politics 17. The Alt-Right as a Community of Discourse 18. Post-Communism,
Democratisation and the Media: (Nearly) Thirty Years On 19. Putin's Slangy
Newspeak as a Paradox of His Public Communication 20. Digital Media,
Contentious Politics and Party Systems in Italy and Spain 21. The Detached
Observer: On a Necessary Change to the Self-Image of Journalists in the
Digital World Part III: Communication and Media Research in Scientific and
Social Practice 22. The Double Hermeneutics of Communication Research 23.
Fast-Capitalist Veils from Communication Theory for "The Public" and Its
"Discourse" 24. Reframing the Paradox of Pluralism as a Communication
Problem 25. New Technologies, Old Questions: The Enduring Issues of
Communications Research 26. A Critical Perspective on the Post-Internet
World 27. Communication Research: Resignation or Optimism? 28. On Human
Communication 29. Studying Political Economies of Communication in the
Twenty-First Century 30. Expanding the Epistemological Horizon:
Institutionalised Visual Knowledge and Human Rights 31. Researching Fake
News: A Selective Examination of Empirical Studies 32. Gendering Media
Policy Research and Communication Governance
Part I: Publicness and the Public Sphere in the Internet Age 1.
Publicness-Privateness: The Liquefaction of "The Great Dichotomy" 2.
Debunking Deference: The Delusions of Unmediated Reality in the
Contemporary Public Sphere 3. Media, Knowledge and Trust: The Deepening
Epistemic Crisis of Democracy 4. Fake Democracy: The Limits of Public
Sphere Theory 5. Visibility and the Public Sphere: A Normative
Conceptualisation 6. Refeudalisation Revisited: The Destruction of
Deliberative Democracy 7. Standpoint, Mediation and the Working-Class
Public Sphere 8. Dissonant and Disconnected Public Spheres as Challenge for
Political Communication Research 9. A Youth-Driven Virtual Civic Public
Sphere for the Arab World 10. Family Feud: Who's Still Fighting about Dewey
and Lippmann? Part II: Democracy and the Crisis of Public Communication
11. The Crisis of Public Communication, 1995-2017 12. Democracy and the
Internet: A Retrospective 13. Post-Globalisation 14. Modern Political
Communication and Web 2.0 in Representative Democracies 15. Revisiting
Digital News Audiences with a Political Magnifying Glass 16. Translation as
Politics 17. The Alt-Right as a Community of Discourse 18. Post-Communism,
Democratisation and the Media: (Nearly) Thirty Years On 19. Putin's Slangy
Newspeak as a Paradox of His Public Communication 20. Digital Media,
Contentious Politics and Party Systems in Italy and Spain 21. The Detached
Observer: On a Necessary Change to the Self-Image of Journalists in the
Digital World Part III: Communication and Media Research in Scientific and
Social Practice 22. The Double Hermeneutics of Communication Research 23.
Fast-Capitalist Veils from Communication Theory for "The Public" and Its
"Discourse" 24. Reframing the Paradox of Pluralism as a Communication
Problem 25. New Technologies, Old Questions: The Enduring Issues of
Communications Research 26. A Critical Perspective on the Post-Internet
World 27. Communication Research: Resignation or Optimism? 28. On Human
Communication 29. Studying Political Economies of Communication in the
Twenty-First Century 30. Expanding the Epistemological Horizon:
Institutionalised Visual Knowledge and Human Rights 31. Researching Fake
News: A Selective Examination of Empirical Studies 32. Gendering Media
Policy Research and Communication Governance
Publicness-Privateness: The Liquefaction of "The Great Dichotomy" 2.
Debunking Deference: The Delusions of Unmediated Reality in the
Contemporary Public Sphere 3. Media, Knowledge and Trust: The Deepening
Epistemic Crisis of Democracy 4. Fake Democracy: The Limits of Public
Sphere Theory 5. Visibility and the Public Sphere: A Normative
Conceptualisation 6. Refeudalisation Revisited: The Destruction of
Deliberative Democracy 7. Standpoint, Mediation and the Working-Class
Public Sphere 8. Dissonant and Disconnected Public Spheres as Challenge for
Political Communication Research 9. A Youth-Driven Virtual Civic Public
Sphere for the Arab World 10. Family Feud: Who's Still Fighting about Dewey
and Lippmann? Part II: Democracy and the Crisis of Public Communication
11. The Crisis of Public Communication, 1995-2017 12. Democracy and the
Internet: A Retrospective 13. Post-Globalisation 14. Modern Political
Communication and Web 2.0 in Representative Democracies 15. Revisiting
Digital News Audiences with a Political Magnifying Glass 16. Translation as
Politics 17. The Alt-Right as a Community of Discourse 18. Post-Communism,
Democratisation and the Media: (Nearly) Thirty Years On 19. Putin's Slangy
Newspeak as a Paradox of His Public Communication 20. Digital Media,
Contentious Politics and Party Systems in Italy and Spain 21. The Detached
Observer: On a Necessary Change to the Self-Image of Journalists in the
Digital World Part III: Communication and Media Research in Scientific and
Social Practice 22. The Double Hermeneutics of Communication Research 23.
Fast-Capitalist Veils from Communication Theory for "The Public" and Its
"Discourse" 24. Reframing the Paradox of Pluralism as a Communication
Problem 25. New Technologies, Old Questions: The Enduring Issues of
Communications Research 26. A Critical Perspective on the Post-Internet
World 27. Communication Research: Resignation or Optimism? 28. On Human
Communication 29. Studying Political Economies of Communication in the
Twenty-First Century 30. Expanding the Epistemological Horizon:
Institutionalised Visual Knowledge and Human Rights 31. Researching Fake
News: A Selective Examination of Empirical Studies 32. Gendering Media
Policy Research and Communication Governance