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Post a Comment On: Understanding Society

"Media and political culture"

7 Comments -

1 – 7 of 7
Anonymous Philosopher's Beard said...

Great post as usual.

Consider Fox News and Talk Radio as new media. I wonder if the predominance of hot-button topics there compared with more traditional (lamestream) media relates to the increasing blurring of truth and opinion in America today. Is American democracy now at a stage where truth - whether of facts like Obama's birth, or of scientific truths like global climate change - is sincerely seen as a matter of opinion on which people are free to disagree and then vote on? i.e. is the world becoming political all the way down?

January 12, 2011 at 12:11 PM

Blogger Ramani Singh Rajput said...

Its Gr8 post about NEW MEDIA ' S role in good Democracy.

January 13, 2011 at 4:12 AM

Anonymous devi said...

Its indeed a Gr8 post about NEW MEDIA'S in a good democracy.

January 13, 2011 at 4:31 AM

Anonymous Yioryos said...

You bring up two interesting - and analytically feasible - questions.

1) With regard to the existence of empirical studies of content and value systems associated with various media channels:
A vast literature exists that through content analysis of news media, seeks to explain the elements that may influence the production of news content, including but not limited to individual, organizational, regulatory, ownership, ideological, economic, and cultural factors.


2) With regard to the additional dimension of antagonism, intolerance, and hostility in news content:
I haven't come across any scholarly studies to date that have addressed this. But I believe that in the next year or two we should see some studies in this area. I'll keep my eye out for any. Content analyses tend to be time-consuming and at times expensive. It would be very interesting to compare political discourse from before and after President Obama's election to determine if it has changed, and if so, the extent to which it has.

January 18, 2011 at 10:33 PM

Blogger CChiu said...

I am no a socialogist> I wonder Fox news attracts people with a certain political inclination, or rather it formulates and aggregates this inclination.
Are there studies on how political inclination is formed, or the factors that it is a function of?
thanks

January 29, 2011 at 6:00 AM

Anonymous Mike said...

The average person watches up to 4 hours maybe even 5 hours of television a day. That means they go to work 9 to 5 then watch television and go to bed. What a crummy way to live your life.

September 28, 2012 at 12:05 PM

Anonymous thesis examples said...

It would be very useful to have a few years of data on the percentage of the newshole devoted to incendiary reporting about issues,

November 16, 2012 at 2:08 AM

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