
New Media and Politics
SAGE Publications Inc (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 5. December 2000
Book
Paperback/Softback
240 pages
978-0-7619-6200-7 (ISBN)
Description
`The book makes a successful attempt to map the potentially transformative effects of new media on various aspects of political insitiutions and culture, both at a theorectical and empirical level. Barrie Axford's discussion of the changing nature of political practice and technologies of political communication in relation to wider discourse of "crisis" is insightful and well argued....This is a genuinely thought provoking and generally very well written book. The book also works well by providing a potential basis for theoretically informed future research in the field of political communication' - Political Theory
Exploring the theme of the putative transformation of political modernity under the impact of `new' media, this book adopts a questioning approach to the ways in which cultural and technological factors are affecting the temper of political life, and reflects the variety of normative thinking about and empirical research on the changing character of politics in mediatized cultures.
New Media and Politics examines: the extent to which commercial populism now dominates electoral and other political discourses; the ways in which the functions of leadership, government and political parties are modified by different forms of both old and new media; the democratic or undemocratic import of such changes; and the ways in which the dominant territorial paradigm of politics is challenged by the space and time devouring capacities of electronic media.
Exploring the theme of the putative transformation of political modernity under the impact of `new' media, this book adopts a questioning approach to the ways in which cultural and technological factors are affecting the temper of political life, and reflects the variety of normative thinking about and empirical research on the changing character of politics in mediatized cultures.
New Media and Politics examines: the extent to which commercial populism now dominates electoral and other political discourses; the ways in which the functions of leadership, government and political parties are modified by different forms of both old and new media; the democratic or undemocratic import of such changes; and the ways in which the dominant territorial paradigm of politics is challenged by the space and time devouring capacities of electronic media.
Reviews / Votes
`The book makes a successful attempt to map the potentially transformative effects of new media on various aspects of political insitiutions and culture, both at a theorectical and empirical level. Barrie Axford's discussion of the changing nature of political practice and technologies of political communication in relation to wider discourse of "crisis" is insightful and well argued....This is a genuinely thought provoking and generally very well written book. The book also works well by providing a potential basis for theoretically informed future research in the field of political communication' - Political TheoryMore details
Edition
First Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Thousand Oaks
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
371 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7619-6200-7 (9780761962007)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Barrie Axford | Richard Huggins
New Media and Politics
Book
12/2000
1st Edition
SAGE Publications Inc
€235.12
Article exhausted; check different version

Barrie Axford | Richard Huggins
New Media and Politics
E-Book
12/2000
1st Edition
SAGE Publications Ltd
from
€49.09
Available for download
Persons
Barrie Axford is Professor Emeritus in politics in the School of Social Sciences at Oxford Brookes University, where he was founding Director of the Centre for Global Politics Economy and Society (GPES). He is interested in global theory, processes of globalization, and the framing of politics by digital media. His books include The Global System (1996); Theories of Globalization (2013); The World-Making Power of New Media: Mere Connection? (2018) and 3 co-authored editions of Politics: An Introduction. He has recently co-edited Rethinking Ideology in the Age of Global Discontent, with Gulmez.B and Gulmez, D (2018) and Political Sociologies of the Cultural Encounter, with Brisbourne, A, Halperin, S and Lueders, C (2020). Currently, he is guest editor for a Special Forum of the journal Globalizations on Is an Integrated Theory of Globalization Possible, and is it Desirable? and guest co-editor (with Manfred Steger) of the forthcoming 2021 volume of the journal Protosociology, on Populism and Globalization. His work has been translated into several languages. He is starting work on a book about the indifferent globality of viruses, BIg Data and A.I.
Content
The Transformation of Politics or Anti-Politics? - Barrie Axford
The Transformation of Political Communication? - Sandra Moog and Jeff Sluyter-Beltrao
The Transformation of Democracy? - Peter Dahlgren
The Transformation of the Public Sphere? - Sinikka Sassi
The Transformation of Citizenship? - Stephen Coleman
The Transformation of the Political Audience - Richard Huggins
The Transformation of Governance? - Ken Newton
The Transformation of Political Leadership? - Jennifer Stromer-Galley and Kathleen Hall Jamieson
The Transformation of Political Parties? - Dominic Wring and Ivan Horrocks
The Transformation of Political Modernity? - John Street
The Transformation of Political Communication? - Sandra Moog and Jeff Sluyter-Beltrao
The Transformation of Democracy? - Peter Dahlgren
The Transformation of the Public Sphere? - Sinikka Sassi
The Transformation of Citizenship? - Stephen Coleman
The Transformation of the Political Audience - Richard Huggins
The Transformation of Governance? - Ken Newton
The Transformation of Political Leadership? - Jennifer Stromer-Galley and Kathleen Hall Jamieson
The Transformation of Political Parties? - Dominic Wring and Ivan Horrocks
The Transformation of Political Modernity? - John Street