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Demanding Democracy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,936
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Demanding Democracy (Hardcover)
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Public interest in the 1992 presidential campaign resulted in the
highest electoral turnout since the heated, war-focused 1968 race
involving Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, and George Wallace. In
Demanding Democracy Robert Schmuhl examines the unparalleled
interplay among citizens, political figures, and the media during
the 1992 election year, arguing that a number of events--the hunger
of an angry electorate for answers to their problems, the backlash
against the sound-bites and negative spots of 1988, the impact of
the "New News" with its proliferation of sources for political
information, and Ross Perot's emergence as a presidential
candidate--resulted in the people reshaping political institutions
and the media as they demanded a more proximate and participatory
democracy. After an introductory section, Schmuhl looks backward to
1992, examining in detail how George Bush, Ross Perot, and Bill
Clinton were portrayed by different forms of popular communication.
Some of the questions Schmuhl addresses in this section are: Why
did George Bush lose the popularity he enjoyed in 1991 after the
Persian Gulf War? What did the emergence of Ross Perot and his
extensive use of television signify for American politics? And how
was the relatively unknown Bill Clinton able to overcome doubts
about his character to win the White House? In the final section
Schmuhl looks forward, exploring the impact of new communication
technology on the way in which we as citizens form our opinions,
elect candidates, and participate in public life. He discusses the
"Information Highway," speculating if it will lead to more
politically attuned voters, or to people more inclined to turn away
from civic concerns toward personal pursuits. And finally, Schmuhl
analyzes what the predicted demographic shifts over the next
half-century will mean to political life in the United States.
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