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This edited collection brings together leading international
scholars to explore the connection between Brexit and the media.
The referendum and the activism on both sides of the campaign have
been of significant interest to the media in the UK and around the
world. How these factors have been represented in the media and the
role of the media in constructing the referendum narrative are
central to assisting the development in our understanding of how UK
and global democracy is being manifested in contemporary times.
This book explores these topics through presenting a wide range of
perspectives from research conducted by leading international
scholars, and concludes with an assessment of the potential
democratic and international implications for the future. By
grappling with a highly important and controversial topic in a
comparative and varied way, the volume contributes to theoretical
debates about the nature and role of the media in complex social,
political and cultural contexts.
This book examines how technologies are changing, will change, or
could change the relationship between audiences and news media. It
highlights how novel technologies could have fundamental
implications for the way that news media interact with wider
society. The book comprises of four thematic parts. Firstly, it
focuses on the impact of technological development on the news
media business, exploring how news media uses new technologies to
improve their sustainability. Secondly, it considers the ethical
dilemmas that arise when audience-news media relationships are
transformed by technological development. The third part of the
book approaches the effects of novel technologies from the
journalists’ viewpoint: how do new technologies intervene in the
audience-news media relationship through journalistic work?
Finally, the fourth part dissects the ways new technologies can
impact audience-news media relationships through transforming
audience agency, audience preferences and news media’s
understanding of them.
This book examines how technologies are changing, will change, or
could change the relationship between audiences and news media. It
highlights how novel technologies could have fundamental
implications for the way that news media interact with wider
society. The book comprises of four thematic parts. Firstly, it
focuses on the impact of technological development on the news
media business, exploring how news media uses new technologies to
improve their sustainability. Secondly, it considers the ethical
dilemmas that arise when audience-news media relationships are
transformed by technological development. The third part of the
book approaches the effects of novel technologies from the
journalists' viewpoint: how do new technologies intervene in the
audience-news media relationship through journalistic work?
Finally, the fourth part dissects the ways new technologies can
impact audience-news media relationships through transforming
audience agency, audience preferences and news media's
understanding of them.
This edited collection brings together leading international
scholars to explore the connection between Brexit and the media.
The referendum and the activism on both sides of the campaign have
been of significant interest to the media in the UK and around the
world. How these factors have been represented in the media and the
role of the media in constructing the referendum narrative are
central to assisting the development in our understanding of how UK
and global democracy is being manifested in contemporary times.
This book explores these topics through presenting a wide range of
perspectives from research conducted by leading international
scholars, and concludes with an assessment of the potential
democratic and international implications for the future. By
grappling with a highly important and controversial topic in a
comparative and varied way, the volume contributes to theoretical
debates about the nature and role of the media in complex social,
political and cultural contexts.
This book explores the role of television in the 1950s and early
1960s, with a focus on the relationship between Tories and TV. The
early 1950s were characterized by recovery from war and high
politics. Television was a new medium that eventually came to
dominate mass media and political culture. But what impact did this
transition have on political organization and elite power
structures? Winston Churchill avoided it; Anthony Eden wanted to
control it; Harold Macmillan tried to master it; and Alec
Douglas-Home was not Prime Minister long enough to fully utilize
it. The Conservative Party's relationship with the new medium of
television is a topic rich with scholarly questions and interesting
quirks that were characteristic of the period. This exploration
examines the changing dynamics between politics and the media, at
grassroots and elite levels. Through analysing rich and diverse
source materials from the Conservative Party Archive, Anthony
Ridge-Newman takes a case study approach to comparing the impact of
television at different points in the party's history. In mapping
changes across a thirteen year period of continual Conservative
governance, this book argues that the advent of television
contributed to the party's transition from a membership-focused
party to a television-centric professionalized elite.
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