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eBook
Author Couldry, Nick.

Title Media consumption and public engagement [electronic resource] ; Beyond the presumption of attention / Nick Couldry, Sonia Livingstone, Tim Markham.

Imprint Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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Location Shelfmark Status
 Web, Electronic Book    Available Online
Description 264 p.
02 75.60 GBP 00 S 63.00 20.0 75.60 12.60 GB xxk Palgrave Macmillan onix-pt
Series Consumption and public life
Note Electronic book text.
Epublication based on: 9780230247383, 2007.
Contents List of Tables List of Figures Preface PART I: THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS Democracy and the Presumption of Attention Media Consumption and Public Connection Tracking Public Connection: Some Methodological Issues PART II: THE PUBLIC CONNECTION PROJECT Introduction Mediated Public Connection: Broad Dynamics The Variability of Media Use Values, Talk and Action Democracy Seen from Afar Engagement and Mediation: Findings from the Public Connection Survey PART III: CONCLUSION Conclusion: The Future of Public Connection Appendices References Index.
File Type Document
Summary Democracy is based on the belief that the media gets the attention of voters. But is this plausible in an age of multiplying media, disillusionment with the political system and time-scarcity? This book, now available in paperback, addresses this question, and charts experiences of 'public connection'. Governments in many countries fear voting turnout and political engagement is in terminal decline, threatening the long-term legitimacy of the democratic process. Meanwhile definitions of politics and the public world are changing, while media formats are proliferating and media audiences fragmenting in the age of digital media. How are these important trends related? And what do our everyday habits of consuming media contribute to our possibilities of being effective citizens? Nick Couldry, Sonia Livingstone and Tim Markham address these questions in this agenda-setting book, now available in a revised and updated paperback edition. Using a highly original methodology, drawing on diaries recording individuals perspectives on the public world, the book includes interviews, a nationwide survey and an authoritative review of the current literature on democratic theory, political sociology and media audiences. The result is a major assessment of the difference that media, and our ways of living with media, make to the condition of democracy.
'A significant contribution to academic research.' - The Political Quarterly '...makes an important contribution to debates around the relationship between celebrity and politics, democratic malaise and media effects, which should be of interest to, and should be read by, students both of politics and of media and society more generally.' - European Journal of Communication '...an important book, contributing valuable empirical evidence on 'actually existing' public spheres and presenting us with some disturbing and thought -- and hopefully, action - provoking findings.' - Journal of Consumer Culture 'This book is... a text I will certainly be recommending to students engaged in postgraduate study of audiences, or with any interest in the relationship between media and political engagement.' - Participations 'It is almost as if I had been waiting for precisely this book...with inspiring conceptual clarity, detailed empirical study, and a very accessible style, the authors explore the complex character of citizens' media connection in modern democracies.' - Professor Peter Dahlgren, Lund University, Sweden 'This book may well prove to be an important one for those interested in the relationship between media and politics...This book is a demanding one to read, but it is a text I will certainly be recommending to students engaged in postgraduate study of audiences, or with any interest in the relationship between media and political engagement.' - Michael Higgins, Journal of Audience and Reception Studies 'Couldry et al have provided some significant and rigorous empirical research on public engagement with, and consumption of, the media. Their research makes an important contribution to debates around the relationship between celebrity and politics, democratic malaise and media effects, which should be of interest to, and should be read by students both of politics and of media and society more generally.' -- Heather Savigny, European Journal of Communication 'Nick Couldry, Sonia Livingstone, and Tim Markham apply a timely empirical lens to issues that have been taken-for-granted for too long. It has been too easy to assume a normative role for media in civic knowledge and participation in the face of evidence of decline and then to blame media for that decline. They show that the situation is much more subtle, nuanced, and complex than that; that while the media are central, media cannot alone address the broader conditions that strain a sense of public connection today.' - Professor Stewart M. Hoover, University of Colorado, USA.
System Details PDF.
Biography NICK COULDRY is Professor of Media and Communications, and Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy at Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK. He is the author or editor of, amongst others, Media Rituals: A Critical Approach and Listening Beyond the Echoes: Media, Ethics and Agency in an Uncertain World. SONIA LIVINGSTONE is Professor of Social Psychology in the Department of Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. She is the author or editor of fourteen books including Audiences and Publics, Children and the Internet, and the Handbook of New Media. TIM MARKHAM is Lecturer in Journalism in the Department of Media and Cultural Studies, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK.
Misc. Tag for ezproxy
Subject Mass media -- Political aspects.
Media studies.
Media Studies.
Added Author Livingstone, Sonia M.
Markham, Tim, 1974-
ISBN 9780230279339 : £75.60
0230279333 : £75.60