The Media and Austerity
Comparative perspectives
Herausgeber: Basu, Laura; Knowles, Sophie; Schifferes, Steve
The Media and Austerity
Comparative perspectives
Herausgeber: Basu, Laura; Knowles, Sophie; Schifferes, Steve
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The Media and Austerity examines the role of both mainstream and social media in communicating and critiquing economic and social austerity measures in Europe since 2010, explored from comparative, historical and interdisciplinary vantage points.
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The Media and Austerity examines the role of both mainstream and social media in communicating and critiquing economic and social austerity measures in Europe since 2010, explored from comparative, historical and interdisciplinary vantage points.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 581g
- ISBN-13: 9781138897304
- ISBN-10: 1138897302
- Artikelnr.: 52455891
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 581g
- ISBN-13: 9781138897304
- ISBN-10: 1138897302
- Artikelnr.: 52455891
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Laura Basu is a research fellow in the department of media and communications, Goldsmiths, University of London and at the Institute for Cultural Inquiry, Utrecht University, the Netherlands. She is the author of Media Amnesia: Rewriting the Economic Crisis (2018). Steve Schifferes was the Marjorie Deane Professor of Financial Journalism at City, University of London from 2009 to 2017, where he directed a new MA in Financial Journalism. He is the co-editor of The Media and Financial Crises: Comparative and Historical Perspectives (2014). As a BBC economics journalist for 20 years, he covered many financial and economic crises around the world. Sophie Knowles is a senior lecturer and programme leader in Journalism at Middlesex University, UK. She has been a researcher at Murdoch University, Australia; City, University of London, UK; and the University of Cambridge, UK. She has written on the reporting of financial crises in financial news and has published work in journals such as Journalism Studies.
Foreword Justin Lewis Introduction Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles Part I: The UK experience 1. The UK news media and austerity:
trends since the global financial crisis Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles 2. Media amnesia and the crisis Laura Basu 3. Austerity, the media
and the UK public Mike Berry 4. The economic recovery on TV news Richard
Thomas 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive
Richard Roberts Part II: European perspectives 6. Covering the Euro crisis:
cleavages and convergences Heinz-Werner Niensted 7. Austerity policies in
the European press: a divided Europe? Ángel Arrese 8. Safeguarding the
status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain
Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco 9. Race and class in German media
representations of the 'Greek crisis' Yiannis Mylonas Part III:
Journalistic practice and the crisis 10. Whose economy, whose news? Aeron
Davis 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts Simon
Wren-Lewis 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis'
in journalism Sophie Knowles 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks
and the attack on Dodd-Frank Adam Cox Part IV: Social media, social
movements and the crisis 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis
Christian Fuchs 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case
study of Stockholm and Latvia Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru 16.
Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media
to imagine the news in Finland and the UK Niki Hatakka 17. #ThisIsaCoup:
the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere
Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz
Knowles Part I: The UK experience 1. The UK news media and austerity:
trends since the global financial crisis Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles 2. Media amnesia and the crisis Laura Basu 3. Austerity, the media
and the UK public Mike Berry 4. The economic recovery on TV news Richard
Thomas 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive
Richard Roberts Part II: European perspectives 6. Covering the Euro crisis:
cleavages and convergences Heinz-Werner Niensted 7. Austerity policies in
the European press: a divided Europe? Ángel Arrese 8. Safeguarding the
status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain
Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco 9. Race and class in German media
representations of the 'Greek crisis' Yiannis Mylonas Part III:
Journalistic practice and the crisis 10. Whose economy, whose news? Aeron
Davis 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts Simon
Wren-Lewis 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis'
in journalism Sophie Knowles 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks
and the attack on Dodd-Frank Adam Cox Part IV: Social media, social
movements and the crisis 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis
Christian Fuchs 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case
study of Stockholm and Latvia Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru 16.
Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media
to imagine the news in Finland and the UK Niki Hatakka 17. #ThisIsaCoup:
the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere
Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz
Foreword Justin Lewis Introduction Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles Part I: The UK experience 1. The UK news media and austerity:
trends since the global financial crisis Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles 2. Media amnesia and the crisis Laura Basu 3. Austerity, the media
and the UK public Mike Berry 4. The economic recovery on TV news Richard
Thomas 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive
Richard Roberts Part II: European perspectives 6. Covering the Euro crisis:
cleavages and convergences Heinz-Werner Niensted 7. Austerity policies in
the European press: a divided Europe? Ángel Arrese 8. Safeguarding the
status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain
Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco 9. Race and class in German media
representations of the 'Greek crisis' Yiannis Mylonas Part III:
Journalistic practice and the crisis 10. Whose economy, whose news? Aeron
Davis 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts Simon
Wren-Lewis 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis'
in journalism Sophie Knowles 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks
and the attack on Dodd-Frank Adam Cox Part IV: Social media, social
movements and the crisis 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis
Christian Fuchs 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case
study of Stockholm and Latvia Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru 16.
Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media
to imagine the news in Finland and the UK Niki Hatakka 17. #ThisIsaCoup:
the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere
Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz
Knowles Part I: The UK experience 1. The UK news media and austerity:
trends since the global financial crisis Steve Schifferes and Sophie
Knowles 2. Media amnesia and the crisis Laura Basu 3. Austerity, the media
and the UK public Mike Berry 4. The economic recovery on TV news Richard
Thomas 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive
Richard Roberts Part II: European perspectives 6. Covering the Euro crisis:
cleavages and convergences Heinz-Werner Niensted 7. Austerity policies in
the European press: a divided Europe? Ángel Arrese 8. Safeguarding the
status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain
Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco 9. Race and class in German media
representations of the 'Greek crisis' Yiannis Mylonas Part III:
Journalistic practice and the crisis 10. Whose economy, whose news? Aeron
Davis 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts Simon
Wren-Lewis 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis'
in journalism Sophie Knowles 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks
and the attack on Dodd-Frank Adam Cox Part IV: Social media, social
movements and the crisis 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis
Christian Fuchs 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case
study of Stockholm and Latvia Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru 16.
Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media
to imagine the news in Finland and the UK Niki Hatakka 17. #ThisIsaCoup:
the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere
Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz