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Media, Democracy and Social Change: Re-imagining Political Communications

23.10.2020 09:29 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

Aeron Davis, Natalie Fenton, Des Freedman and Gholam Khiabany

Sage, October 2020

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1526456966/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tu00_p1_i4

When we a re told so regularly that we live in a ‘post truth’ age and are surrounded by ‘fake news’, it can be tempting to think of politics as primarily media ted. Discussion and analysis of public affairs is preoccupied with the power and reach of platforms or the passion and rage of social media exchanges. As important as these issues may be, a focus on the communicative risks downgrading the political.

Media, Democracy and Social Change puts politics back into political communications. It shows how within a digital media ecology, the wider context of neoliberal capitalism remains essential for understanding what political communications is and can hope to be.

Tackling broad themes of structural inequality, technological change, political realignment and social transformation, the book explores political communications as it relates to debates around the state, infrastructures, elites, populism, political parties, activism, the legacies of colonialism, and more.

It is both an expert introduction to the field of political communications, and a critical intervention to help re-imagine what a democratic politics might mean in a digital age. It will be essential reading for students, researchers and activists.

Aeron Davis, Natalie Fenton, Des Freedman and Gholam Khiabany all work at the Department of Media and Communication at Goldsmiths, University of London, where they teach together on the MA in Political Communications.

Table of Contents

1 Putting Politics Back Into Political Communications

2 Infrastructures of Political Communications

3 The State of Political Communications

4 Elites, Experts, Power and Democracy

5 Democracy Without Political Parties?

6 The Violence of an Illiberal Liberalism

7 Political Communications, Civil Society and the Commons

8 Intellectuals and the Re-imagining of Political Communications

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