
Perspectives on Political Communication
A Case Approach
Pearson (Publisher)
Published on 25. October 2007
Book
Paperback/Softback
416 pages
978-0-205-50887-7 (ISBN)
Description
Political Communicationcovers far more than elections by presenting 13 unique case studies that are each examined through the political science, rhetorical and mass communication perspectives. The foundation of the book is laid in the first three chapters where each of the three authors fully develops his/her perspective and explains how their view relates to understanding political communication. After this groundwork is set, the authors apply these different perspectives to case studies that focus on the presidency, Congress, the Supreme Court, social movements, popular culture and, of course, elections. Each case includes detailed information about the political communication event, analyses from the three perspectives, and a list of additional cases the student might want to explore. The richness and depth of each case is drawn out in the analysis portion of each chapter; readers will walk away with an understanding of how a political scientist, a rhetorician, and a mass communication researcher each think about political communication.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Pearson Education (US)
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
551 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-205-50887-7 (9780205508877)
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
Content
Preface
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 2 - The Political Science Perspective
Chapter 3 - The Rhetorical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mass Communication Perspective
Chapter 5 - Case One: The 1988 Presidential Election
Chapter 6 - Case Two: The 1998 Minnesota Gubernatorial Election
Chapter 7 - Case Three: The 2000 Presidential Election
Chapter 8 - Case Four: The 2004 Presidential Election
Chapter 9 - Case Five: The 2006 Congressional Elections
Chapter 10 - Case Six: Reagan's 1981 Inaugural Address
Chapter 11 - Case Seven: Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky
Chapter 12 - Case Eight: Bush and Combating Terror
Chapter 13 - Case Nine: Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings on Clarence Thomas
Chapter 14 - Case Ten: "Reverse Filibuster" in U.S. Senate
Chapter 15 - Case Eleven: U.S. Supreme Court Case of Texasv. Johnson
Chapter 16 - Case Twelve: Gay and Lesbian Rights Movement
Chapter 17 - Case Thirteen: Popular Culture and Politics
Chapter 18 - Conclusion
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 2 - The Political Science Perspective
Chapter 3 - The Rhetorical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mass Communication Perspective
Chapter 5 - Case One: The 1988 Presidential Election
Chapter 6 - Case Two: The 1998 Minnesota Gubernatorial Election
Chapter 7 - Case Three: The 2000 Presidential Election
Chapter 8 - Case Four: The 2004 Presidential Election
Chapter 9 - Case Five: The 2006 Congressional Elections
Chapter 10 - Case Six: Reagan's 1981 Inaugural Address
Chapter 11 - Case Seven: Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky
Chapter 12 - Case Eight: Bush and Combating Terror
Chapter 13 - Case Nine: Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings on Clarence Thomas
Chapter 14 - Case Ten: "Reverse Filibuster" in U.S. Senate
Chapter 15 - Case Eleven: U.S. Supreme Court Case of Texasv. Johnson
Chapter 16 - Case Twelve: Gay and Lesbian Rights Movement
Chapter 17 - Case Thirteen: Popular Culture and Politics
Chapter 18 - Conclusion