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Présentation Can The Media Serve Democracy? Format Broché
- Livre Science humaines et sociales, Lettres
Résumé :
This landmark collection brings leading scholars in the field of political communication to debate one of the most important questions of our age: Can the media serve democracy? For the media to be democratic, they must enter into a positive relationship with their readers, viewers and listeners as citizens rather than consumers who buy things, audiences who gaze upon spectacles or isolated egos, obsessed with themselves. The media's first task is to remind people that they are inhabitants of a world in which they can make a difference. By enabling citizens to encounter and make sense of events, relationships and cultures of which they have no direct experience, the media constitute a public arena in which members of the public come together as more than passing strangers.
Biographie:
W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle, USA Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Jay G. Blumler, University of Leeds, UK Kees Brants, Leiden University, Netherlands Stephen Coleman, University of Leeds, UK John Corner, University of Liverpool, UK James Curran, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK William H. Dutton, Michigan State University, USA Frank Esser, University of Zurich, Switzerland Bob Franklin, Cardiff University, UK Elihu Katz, University of Pennsylvania, USA Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UK Paolo Mancini, Universit? di Perugia, Italy Gianpietro Mazzoleni, University of Milan, Italy Denis McQuail, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands David Morrison, University of Leeds, UK Giles Moss, University of Leeds, UK Katy Parry, University of Leeds, UK Winfried Schulz, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany James Stanyer, Loughborough University, UK David H. Weaver Indiana University, USA
Sommaire:
List of Tables Acknowledgements Notes on the Contributors 1. Introduction: Can the Media Serve Democracy? PART I: MEDIA SYSTEMS AND COMPARATIVE RESEARCH 2. The Idea of 'Systems' in Media Studies: Criticisms, Risks, Advantages; Paolo Mancini 3. The Fine Art of Comparing Media Systems: Opportunities, Pitfalls and Challenges; Kees Brants 4. Comparative Political Communication Research: The Undiminished Relevance of the Beginnings; Frank Esser 5. Mediatization of the Modern Publicity Process; Winfried Schulz PART II: JOURNALISM, DEMOCRACY AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST 6. Public Service Broadcasting: Markets and 'Vulnerable Values' in Broadcast and Print Journalism; Stephen Cushion and Bob Franklin 7. Political Communication Research in the Public Interest; Denis McQuail 8. Journalists, Journalism, and Research: What Do We Know and Why Should We Care?; David H. Weaver 9. Democratic Political Communication Systems and the Transformative Power of Scandals: Phone Hacking at the News of the World as a Critical Juncture in the Regulation of the British Press; James Stanyer 10. Morals and Methods: A Note on the Value of Survey Research; David E. Morrison PART III: PUBLIC CULTURE AND MEDIATED PUBLICS 11. The Dream Machine?: Television as Public Culture; John Corner 12. Audiences and Publics: Reflections on the Growing Importance of Mediated Participation; Sonia Livingstone 13. On Seeing Both Sides: Notes on the 2012 Presidential Debates; Elihu Katz and Menahem Blondheim PART IV: CHANGING MEDIA, NEW DEMOCRATIC OPPORTUNITIES 14. Media Systems and Social Change: Challenges for Theory and Research; W. Lance Bennett 15. The Internet's Gift to Democratic Governance: The Fifth Estate; William Dutton 16. Towards an Inclusive Digital Public Sphere; Gianpietro Mazzoleni 17. Beyond the Po-Faced Public Sphere; Stephen Coleman PART V: THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION 18. Jay Blumler: A Founding Father of Media Research; James Curran 19. Values are Always at Stake': An Interview with Jay G. Blumler; Katy Parry and Giles Moss Notes References
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