The Media, Political Participation and Empowerment
Herausgeber: Gerodimos, Roman; Scullion, Richard; Jackson, Daniel
The Media, Political Participation and Empowerment
Herausgeber: Gerodimos, Roman; Scullion, Richard; Jackson, Daniel
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This book provides an international perspective on civic and audience empowerment, focusing on how the media can empower or dis-empower citizens. With theoretical and empirical chapters it offers a reappraisal of the theories, methods and issues that inform our understanding of citizens and audiences in contemporary politics.
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This book provides an international perspective on civic and audience empowerment, focusing on how the media can empower or dis-empower citizens. With theoretical and empirical chapters it offers a reappraisal of the theories, methods and issues that inform our understanding of citizens and audiences in contemporary politics.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. April 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9780415633499
- ISBN-10: 0415633494
- Artikelnr.: 36621948
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. April 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9780415633499
- ISBN-10: 0415633494
- Artikelnr.: 36621948
Richard Scullion is Senior Lecturer in Marketing Communication at the Media School, Bournemouth University, UK. Roman Gerodimos is Senior Lecturer in Global Current Affairs at the Media School, Bournemouth University, UK. Daniel Jackson is Senior Lecturer in the Media School, Bournemouth University, UK Darren G Lilleker is Senior Lecturer in Political Communication in the Media School, Bournemouth University, UK.
1. Introduction to agents of (dis)empowerment: exploring the media's
contribution to civic engagement Part 1: Political communication:
empowering or disempowering? 2. Media, politics and empowerment: In whose
interests? Heather Savigny 3. Empowering the Citizen? Political
communication, coproduction and the harnessed crowd Darren G. Lilleker 4.
Attack Advertising as an Agent of British Youth Political Disempowerment? A
Review of Empirical Evidence from the 2010 British General Election Janine
Dermody, Stuart Hanmer-Lloyd, Nicole Koenig-Lewis and Anita L. Zhao 5.
Governmentality, Populism and Empowerment: David Cameron's rhetoric of the
Big Society Michael Higgins 6. Closing the Gap? Twitter as an instrument
for connected representation Todd Graham, Marcel Broersma and Karin
Hazelhoff Part 2: Political participation in mediated spaces: merely 'soft'
empowerment? 7. Is "empowerment" still a useful concept? Rethinking media
practice with Rancière and the "emancipated spectator" Felicitas
Macgilchrist 8. Digital participation in news media: 'Minimalist' views
versus meaningful interaction Tamara Witschge 9. Routinisation of Audience
Participation: BBC News Online, Citizenship and Democratic Debate Einar
Thorsen 10. Facadelifts: New media installations, public space and the
negotiation of civic identity Gabriel Menotti 11. Claims-makers versus
counter claims-makers: new sites of civic empowerment in the construction,
affirmation and contestation of moral panic narratives through online
newspaper discussion-threads James Morrison Part 3: Citizen (public)
mediated acts of empowerment: challenging the status quo? 12. Introducing
'Citizen diplomacy 2.0': A framework for the study of online engagement
with global affairs Roman Gerodimos 13. Disabled People, Digital Campaigns,
and Contentious Politics: Upload Successful or Connection Failed? Filippo
Trevisan 14. What are UK youth doing online? Exploring dimensions of
participation and use Janelle Ward 15. Did you read about that bloody
politician in the papers' Mediated political events and how they penetrate
everyday discussion online Daniel Jackson, Richard Scullion and Mike
Molesworth 16. Audience empowerment and the politics of representation in
two radio talk shows in post-apartheid South Africa Jendele Hungbo 17.
Civic and audience empowerment: the role of citizen journalism Mick Temple
Conclusion 18. Concluding remarks Richard Scullion, Darren Lilleker, Roman
Gerodimos and Daniel Jackson 19. Afterword Stuart Allan
contribution to civic engagement Part 1: Political communication:
empowering or disempowering? 2. Media, politics and empowerment: In whose
interests? Heather Savigny 3. Empowering the Citizen? Political
communication, coproduction and the harnessed crowd Darren G. Lilleker 4.
Attack Advertising as an Agent of British Youth Political Disempowerment? A
Review of Empirical Evidence from the 2010 British General Election Janine
Dermody, Stuart Hanmer-Lloyd, Nicole Koenig-Lewis and Anita L. Zhao 5.
Governmentality, Populism and Empowerment: David Cameron's rhetoric of the
Big Society Michael Higgins 6. Closing the Gap? Twitter as an instrument
for connected representation Todd Graham, Marcel Broersma and Karin
Hazelhoff Part 2: Political participation in mediated spaces: merely 'soft'
empowerment? 7. Is "empowerment" still a useful concept? Rethinking media
practice with Rancière and the "emancipated spectator" Felicitas
Macgilchrist 8. Digital participation in news media: 'Minimalist' views
versus meaningful interaction Tamara Witschge 9. Routinisation of Audience
Participation: BBC News Online, Citizenship and Democratic Debate Einar
Thorsen 10. Facadelifts: New media installations, public space and the
negotiation of civic identity Gabriel Menotti 11. Claims-makers versus
counter claims-makers: new sites of civic empowerment in the construction,
affirmation and contestation of moral panic narratives through online
newspaper discussion-threads James Morrison Part 3: Citizen (public)
mediated acts of empowerment: challenging the status quo? 12. Introducing
'Citizen diplomacy 2.0': A framework for the study of online engagement
with global affairs Roman Gerodimos 13. Disabled People, Digital Campaigns,
and Contentious Politics: Upload Successful or Connection Failed? Filippo
Trevisan 14. What are UK youth doing online? Exploring dimensions of
participation and use Janelle Ward 15. Did you read about that bloody
politician in the papers' Mediated political events and how they penetrate
everyday discussion online Daniel Jackson, Richard Scullion and Mike
Molesworth 16. Audience empowerment and the politics of representation in
two radio talk shows in post-apartheid South Africa Jendele Hungbo 17.
Civic and audience empowerment: the role of citizen journalism Mick Temple
Conclusion 18. Concluding remarks Richard Scullion, Darren Lilleker, Roman
Gerodimos and Daniel Jackson 19. Afterword Stuart Allan
1. Introduction to agents of (dis)empowerment: exploring the media's
contribution to civic engagement Part 1: Political communication:
empowering or disempowering? 2. Media, politics and empowerment: In whose
interests? Heather Savigny 3. Empowering the Citizen? Political
communication, coproduction and the harnessed crowd Darren G. Lilleker 4.
Attack Advertising as an Agent of British Youth Political Disempowerment? A
Review of Empirical Evidence from the 2010 British General Election Janine
Dermody, Stuart Hanmer-Lloyd, Nicole Koenig-Lewis and Anita L. Zhao 5.
Governmentality, Populism and Empowerment: David Cameron's rhetoric of the
Big Society Michael Higgins 6. Closing the Gap? Twitter as an instrument
for connected representation Todd Graham, Marcel Broersma and Karin
Hazelhoff Part 2: Political participation in mediated spaces: merely 'soft'
empowerment? 7. Is "empowerment" still a useful concept? Rethinking media
practice with Rancière and the "emancipated spectator" Felicitas
Macgilchrist 8. Digital participation in news media: 'Minimalist' views
versus meaningful interaction Tamara Witschge 9. Routinisation of Audience
Participation: BBC News Online, Citizenship and Democratic Debate Einar
Thorsen 10. Facadelifts: New media installations, public space and the
negotiation of civic identity Gabriel Menotti 11. Claims-makers versus
counter claims-makers: new sites of civic empowerment in the construction,
affirmation and contestation of moral panic narratives through online
newspaper discussion-threads James Morrison Part 3: Citizen (public)
mediated acts of empowerment: challenging the status quo? 12. Introducing
'Citizen diplomacy 2.0': A framework for the study of online engagement
with global affairs Roman Gerodimos 13. Disabled People, Digital Campaigns,
and Contentious Politics: Upload Successful or Connection Failed? Filippo
Trevisan 14. What are UK youth doing online? Exploring dimensions of
participation and use Janelle Ward 15. Did you read about that bloody
politician in the papers' Mediated political events and how they penetrate
everyday discussion online Daniel Jackson, Richard Scullion and Mike
Molesworth 16. Audience empowerment and the politics of representation in
two radio talk shows in post-apartheid South Africa Jendele Hungbo 17.
Civic and audience empowerment: the role of citizen journalism Mick Temple
Conclusion 18. Concluding remarks Richard Scullion, Darren Lilleker, Roman
Gerodimos and Daniel Jackson 19. Afterword Stuart Allan
contribution to civic engagement Part 1: Political communication:
empowering or disempowering? 2. Media, politics and empowerment: In whose
interests? Heather Savigny 3. Empowering the Citizen? Political
communication, coproduction and the harnessed crowd Darren G. Lilleker 4.
Attack Advertising as an Agent of British Youth Political Disempowerment? A
Review of Empirical Evidence from the 2010 British General Election Janine
Dermody, Stuart Hanmer-Lloyd, Nicole Koenig-Lewis and Anita L. Zhao 5.
Governmentality, Populism and Empowerment: David Cameron's rhetoric of the
Big Society Michael Higgins 6. Closing the Gap? Twitter as an instrument
for connected representation Todd Graham, Marcel Broersma and Karin
Hazelhoff Part 2: Political participation in mediated spaces: merely 'soft'
empowerment? 7. Is "empowerment" still a useful concept? Rethinking media
practice with Rancière and the "emancipated spectator" Felicitas
Macgilchrist 8. Digital participation in news media: 'Minimalist' views
versus meaningful interaction Tamara Witschge 9. Routinisation of Audience
Participation: BBC News Online, Citizenship and Democratic Debate Einar
Thorsen 10. Facadelifts: New media installations, public space and the
negotiation of civic identity Gabriel Menotti 11. Claims-makers versus
counter claims-makers: new sites of civic empowerment in the construction,
affirmation and contestation of moral panic narratives through online
newspaper discussion-threads James Morrison Part 3: Citizen (public)
mediated acts of empowerment: challenging the status quo? 12. Introducing
'Citizen diplomacy 2.0': A framework for the study of online engagement
with global affairs Roman Gerodimos 13. Disabled People, Digital Campaigns,
and Contentious Politics: Upload Successful or Connection Failed? Filippo
Trevisan 14. What are UK youth doing online? Exploring dimensions of
participation and use Janelle Ward 15. Did you read about that bloody
politician in the papers' Mediated political events and how they penetrate
everyday discussion online Daniel Jackson, Richard Scullion and Mike
Molesworth 16. Audience empowerment and the politics of representation in
two radio talk shows in post-apartheid South Africa Jendele Hungbo 17.
Civic and audience empowerment: the role of citizen journalism Mick Temple
Conclusion 18. Concluding remarks Richard Scullion, Darren Lilleker, Roman
Gerodimos and Daniel Jackson 19. Afterword Stuart Allan