There is an elaborate and often invisible carnival that emerges
alongside presidential campaigns as innumerable activist groups
attempt to press their issues into mainstream political discourse.
Sarah Sobieraj's fascinating ethnographic portrait of fifty diverse
organizations over the course of two campaign cycles reveals that
while most activist groups equate political success with media
success and channel their energies accordingly, their efforts fail
to generate news coverage and come with deleterious consequences.
Sobieraj shows that activists' impact on public political debates
is minimal, and carefully unravels the ways in which their
all-consuming media work and unrelenting public relations approach
undermine their ability to communicate with pedestrians, comes at
the expense of other political activities, and perhaps most
perniciously, damages the groups themselves.
Weaving together fieldwork, news analysis, and in-depth
interviews with activists and journalists, "Soundbitten"
illuminates the relationship between news and activist
organizations. This captivating portrait of activism in the United
States lays bare the challenges faced by outsiders struggling to be
heard in a mass media dominated public sphere that proves
exclusionary and shows that media-centrism is not only ineffective,
but also damaging to group life. "Soundbitten" reveals why
media-centered activism so often fails, what activist groups lose
in the process, and why we should all be concerned.
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