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El. knyga: Communicating Politics Online: Disruption and Democracy

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031240560
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031240560

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This second edition explores the relationship between politics and media, with a particular emphasis on the significant disruptive changes to media and technology that have faced journalists, campaigners, and the public in recent years. The first edition, in 2014, described the earliest elements of social and online media: Web 2.0, the ‘information economy,’ and the changes from traditional broadcast media to the early online world. With the rise of TikTok, the ‘fake news’ claims of Donald Trump, the decline of local news, and the anti-democratic impulses that drove the January 6, 2021 coup attempts, the last decade has provided a rich and sometimes confounding set of disruptions to political communication that deserve attention. Technology has disrupted political communication in the online environment exceptionally quickly over the last decade, and this book provides a framework for understanding the intersections of these disruptions and their effect on an already-fragile democratic circumstance in the United States.

1 The Disrupting of Mobile Communication
1(10)
The Paul Pelosi Attack
1(2)
Technology Is Disruptive
3(2)
Four Disruptive Themes
5(2)
Conclusion
7(1)
References
7(4)
Part I Mobile Digital Technology Disrupts the News Media Industry
2 Disrupting Journalism
11(14)
Technological Advances in Journalism
11(4)
Paywalls
15(4)
Video Content
19(1)
The New World of Journalism
20(2)
References
22(3)
3 Information Literacy in a Mobile World
25(20)
"Democracy Dies in Darkness"
25(2)
Critical Thinking About the News
27(6)
Social Media's Contribution
33(4)
The Cambridge Analytica Scandal
37(2)
Conclusion
39(1)
References
40(5)
Part II Digital Mobile Media Disrupts Consumption of News
4 "Fake News" in a Mobile World
45(12)
The Fake News Agenda
45(1)
Ideological Media Emerges
46(2)
Trump and the Media
48(2)
"Fake News" as a Strategy
50(4)
Conclusion
54(1)
References
55(2)
5 News Deserts
57(14)
Is Local News Dying?
57(4)
The Effects of News Desertification
61(2)
The Role of Digital Media
63(4)
Conclusion
67(1)
References
67(4)
Part III Digital Mobile Technology Disruption of Electioneering
6 A New World of Campaigning
71(14)
Campaigning Is a Growth Industry
71(1)
The First Social Campaign
72(2)
Shifting Campaign Strategy
74(3)
Campaigning In A Social World
77(4)
Donald Trump Changes the Game
81(1)
Conclusion
82(1)
References
82(3)
7 Polarizing Media, Polarizing Politics
85(14)
The Consequences of Strategic Base Mobilization
85(2)
Harsher Campaign Rhetoric
87(3)
Governmental Polarization
90(3)
Conclusion
93(1)
References
94(5)
Part IV Digital Mobile Media Disrupting Democracy
8 Negative Partisanship
99(10)
Rewiring the Human Brain
99(2)
The Tribal Mentality of the Digital Mobile World
101(3)
Negative Partisanship
104(2)
Conclusion
106(1)
References
107(2)
9 The Media and the American Voter
109(6)
The Homogeneity Impetus
109(1)
Identity Politics in the Digital Mobile Environment
110(2)
Declining Trust
112(3)
Conclusions 115(1)
The Question of Inevitability 116(2)
References 118(1)
Index 119
Chapman Rackaway is Chair and Professor of Political Science at Radford University, USA.