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Since the election of President Hugo Chavez in 1998, Venezuela has
become an important news item. Western coverage is shaped by the
cultural milieu of its journalists, with news written from New York
or London by non-specialists or by those staying inside wealthy
guarded enclaves in an intensely segregated Caracas. Journalists
mainly work with English-speaking elites and have little contact
with the poor majority. Therefore, they reproduce ideas largely
attuned to a Western, neoliberal understanding of Venezuela.
Through extensive analysis of media coverage from Chavez's election
to the present day, as well as detailed interviews with journalists
and academics covering the country, Bad News from Venezuela
highlights the factors contributing to reportage in Venezuela and
why those factors exist in the first place. From this examination
of a single Latin American country, the book furthers the
discussion of contemporary media in the West, and how, with the
rise of 'fake news', their operations have a significant impact on
the wider representation of global affairs. Bad News from Venezuela
is comprehensive and enlightening for undergraduate students and
research academics in media and Latin American studies.
Ontario boasts a potent mix of brewing traditions. Wherever
Europeans explored, battled, and settled, beer was not far behind,
which brought the simple magic of brewing to Ontario in the 1670s.
Early Hudson's Bay Company traders brewed in Canada's Arctic, and
Loyalist refugees brought the craft north in the 1780s. Early 1900s
temperance activists drove the industry largely underground but
couldn't dry up the quest to quench Ontarians' thirst. The heavy
regulation that replaced prohibition centralized surviving
breweries. Today, independent breweries are booming and writing
their own chapters in the Ontario beer story.
British troops, which arrived as a temporary measure, would remain
in Ireland for the next 38 years. Successive British governments
initially claimed the Northern Ireland conflict to be an internal
matter but the Republic of Ireland had repeatedly demanded a role,
appealing to the UN and US, while across the Atlantic,
Irish-American groups applied pressure on Nixon's largely apathetic
administration to intervene. Following the introduction of
internment and the events of Bloody Sunday, the British were forced
to recognise the international dimension of the conflict and
begrudgingly began to concede that any solution would rely on
Washington and Dublin's involvement. Irish governments seized every
opportunity to shape the political initiative that led to
Sunningdale and Senator Edward Kennedy became the leading US
advocate of American intervention while Nixon, who wanted Britain
onside for his Cold War objectives, was faced with increasingly
influential domestic pressure groups. Eventually, international
involvement in Northern Ireland would play a vital role in shaping
the principles on which political agreement was reached - even
after the breakdown of the Sunningdale Agreement in May 1974. Using
recently released archives in the United Kingdom, Republic of
Ireland and United States, Alan MacLeod offers a new interpretation
of the early period of Northern Ireland's 'Troubles'.
Since the election of President Hugo Chavez in 1998, Venezuela has
become an important news item. Western coverage is shaped by the
cultural milieu of its journalists, with news written from New York
or London by non-specialists or by those staying inside wealthy
guarded enclaves in an intensely segregated Caracas. Journalists
mainly work with English-speaking elites and have little contact
with the poor majority. Therefore, they reproduce ideas largely
attuned to a Western, neoliberal understanding of Venezuela.
Through extensive analysis of media coverage from Chavez's election
to the present day, as well as detailed interviews with journalists
and academics covering the country, Bad News from Venezuela
highlights the factors contributing to reportage in Venezuela and
why those factors exist in the first place. From this examination
of a single Latin American country, the book furthers the
discussion of contemporary media in the West, and how, with the
rise of 'fake news', their operations have a significant impact on
the wider representation of global affairs. Bad News from Venezuela
is comprehensive and enlightening for undergraduate students and
research academics in media and Latin American studies.
Propaganda in the Information Age is a collaborative volume which
updates Herman and Chomsky's propaganda model for the
twenty-first-century media landscape and makes the case for the
continuing relevance of their original ideas. It includes an
exclusive interview with Noam Chomsky himself. 2018 marks 30 years
since the publication of Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky's
ground-breaking book Manufacturing Consent, which lifted the veil
over how the mass media operate. The book's model presented five
filters which all potentially newsworthy events must pass through
before they reach our TV screens, smartphones or newspapers. In
Propaganda in the Information Age, many of the world's leading
media scholars, analysts and journalists use this model to explore
the modern media world, covering some of the most pressing
contemporary topics such as fake news, Cambridge Analytica, the
Syrian Civil War and Russiagate. The collection also acknowledges
that in an increasingly globalized world, our media is increasingly
globalized as well, with chapters exploring both Indian and African
media. For students of Media Studies, Journalism, Communication and
Sociology, Propaganda in the Information Age offers a fascinating
introduction to the propaganda model and how it can be applied to
our understanding not only of how media functions in corporate
America, but across the world in the twenty-first century.
Propaganda in the Information Age is a collaborative volume which
updates Herman and Chomsky's propaganda model for the
twenty-first-century media landscape and makes the case for the
continuing relevance of their original ideas. It includes an
exclusive interview with Noam Chomsky himself. 2018 marks 30 years
since the publication of Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky's
ground-breaking book Manufacturing Consent, which lifted the veil
over how the mass media operate. The book's model presented five
filters which all potentially newsworthy events must pass through
before they reach our TV screens, smartphones or newspapers. In
Propaganda in the Information Age, many of the world's leading
media scholars, analysts and journalists use this model to explore
the modern media world, covering some of the most pressing
contemporary topics such as fake news, Cambridge Analytica, the
Syrian Civil War and Russiagate. The collection also acknowledges
that in an increasingly globalized world, our media is increasingly
globalized as well, with chapters exploring both Indian and African
media. For students of Media Studies, Journalism, Communication and
Sociology, Propaganda in the Information Age offers a fascinating
introduction to the propaganda model and how it can be applied to
our understanding not only of how media functions in corporate
America, but across the world in the twenty-first century.
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