New Media Campaigns and the Managed CitizenA critical assessment of the role that information technologies have come to play in contemporary campaigns. |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Political Communication and Information Technology | 33 |
Politics in Code | 34 |
Digital Democracy in Theory and Practice | 36 |
Political Consultants as a Cultural Industry | 43 |
The Structural Code of Political Communication | 54 |
Analytical Frames for Studying Politics and Information Technology | 60 |
Information Technologies as Cultural Schema | 69 |
Producing the Hypermedia Campaign | 73 |
The Development of Campaign Organization | 145 |
Power and Social Control in the Hypermedia Campaign | 168 |
Managed Citizenship and Information Technology | 170 |
The Wizards of Odds | 171 |
Deviance and Decisions | 176 |
Citizenship in the Digital Democracy | 182 |
Political Schema Rationalized in Code | 191 |
Policy and Process for the Healthy Digital Democracy | 198 |
The Digital Leviathan | 75 |
Hypermedia and the Production of Public Opinion | 91 |
Of Grassroots and Astroturf | 98 |
Learning Politics from the Hypermedia Campaign | 101 |
Software and Surveillance | 104 |
Political Communication and the Open Information Market | 125 |
Political Redlining and Issue Publics | 131 |
Organizational Communication in the Hypermedia Campaign | 143 |
Method Notes on Studying Information Technology and Political Communication | 205 |
Methodological Challenges in Studying Hypermedia Organizations | 208 |
Conclusions | 226 |
Glossary | 239 |
245 | |
261 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activities actors allow analysis become build campaign managers candidates chapter choices citizens clients collected constituents consultants consumers create defined democracy democratic designed developed direct e-mail e-politics effects election ethnography example field firms frame going Grassroots groups hypermedia campaign important individuals information technologies institutions interaction interest issue kinds lobbyists major means messages method norms objects organizational organizations participate particular party political campaigns political communication political content political culture political hypermedia political information polling positions preferences produce professional public opinion questions relations represent Republican responses revealed role sample Senate shared social sources specific sphere staff strategy structure survey television tion traditional United University users voters voting Voting.com Web site
Popular passages
Page 23 - Some people seem to follow what's going on in government and public affaire most of the time, whether there's an election going on or not. Others aren't that interested. Would you say you follow what's going on in government and public affairs most of the time, some of the time, only now and then, or hardly at all?
Page iii - W. Lance Bennett and Robert M. Entman, eds., Mediated Politics: Communication in the Future of Democracy...