Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Communication studies > Media studies
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The Spectatorship of Suffering (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R5,232
Discovery Miles 52 320
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The Spectatorship of Suffering (Hardcover, New)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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`The work is on an important topic that has been oft debated but
rarely systematically studied - the political, cultural, and moral
effects of distant news coverage of suffering. [The book] is
extremely well steeped in the relevant literature, including
semiotics, discourse analysis, media and social theory and makes a
fresh methodological contribution by looking at the codes and
formats of news about suffering. It has a fresh vision and answer
to some of the stickiest moral and media problems of our time...
and deserves to find its place among important books about the
moral aspects of media and society in our times' - John D Peters,
F. Wendell Miller Distinguished Professor, University of Iowa
`Lilie Chouliaraki grounds her sophisticated arguments in
meticulous research. The result is a work of important scholarship
that might even make us think about the world and its mediation in
profoundly new ways' - Roger Silverstone, Professor of Media and
Communications, The London School of Economics and Political
Science `Few intellectuals command this scope from classical
rhetoric to the cutting edge of contemporary social theory as
[Lillie Chouliaraki] is doing in her new book The Spectatorship of
Suffering. This book is destined, in my mind, to be foundational
for our understanding of not just the media but of the highly
complex social process of mediation' - Ron Scollon, Professor of
Linguistics, Georgetown University This book is about the
relationship between the spectators in countries of the west, and
the distant sufferer on the television screen; the sufferer in
Somalia, Nigeria, Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, but also from New
York and Washington DC. How do we relate to television images of
the distant sufferer? This question touches on the ethical role of
the media in public life today. It addresses the issue of whether
the media can cultivate a disposition of care for and engagement
with the far away other; whether television can create a global
public with a sense of social responsibililty towards the distant
sufferer.
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