1st Edition

Media Perspectives for the 21st Century

Edited By Stylianos Papathanassopoulos Copyright 2011
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    Media Perspectives for the 21st Century brings together key international scholars to explore concepts, topics and issues concerning the communication environment in contemporary democratic societies. It combines qualitative and quantitative approaches to provide an interdisciplinary and truly global perspective that reflects the trends, theories and issues in current media and communication research.

    The collection raises significant questions about the study of the media by challenging approaches to major media and societal issues, and analyses in more depth the range of concerns that shape both the present and the future media landscape and the issues these can create for communication. It also investigates the main effects of technological developments on the domain of the news media and journalism.

    Divided into two main sections, Part I provides accounts of the role of the media in society, and deals with agendas that affect the field of communications studies. Part II goes on to examine the world of new media and offers analyses on the developments of the 21st century. Chapters deal with various dimensions of media from a number of different perspectives and socio-political contexts, covering a wide range of topics including Social Networking, Political Communication, Public Journalism, Global Infotainment and Consumer Culture.

    Media Perspectives for the 21st Century will be highly useful to undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as researchers and academics, in the fields of media and communication studies, mass communication, journalism and new media.

    List of Tables and Figures  Notes on Contributors  Abbreviations  Introduction Media Perspectives for the 21st Century Stylianos Papathanassopoulos  PART I: MEDIA IN THE CONTEMPORARY AGE  Chapter 1 Information and Democracy: The Weakening of Social Democracy Frank Webster  Chapter 2 The Transformation of Political Communication Ralph Negrine and Stylianos Papathanassopoulos  Chapter 3 What Does Information Technology Imply For Media Effects Research? Shanto Iyengar  Chapter 4 Infotainment Inc.: The Ascent of a Global Ideology Daya Kishan Thussu  Chapter 5 Emotions in the Media and the Mediatization of Traumas Nicos Demertzis  Chapter 6 Media, Migrations and Transnational Cultures Tristan Mattelart  PART II: COMMUNICATION IN THE DIGITAL ERA  Chapter 7 From Mass to Networked Communication Gustavo Cardoso  Chapter 8 Media Life Mark Deuze  Chapter 9 Consumer Culture and New Media: Commodity Fetishism in the Digital Era Matthew McAllister  Chapter 10 How Does the Internet Change Journalistic Investigation and How Should Communication Science Deal with this Issue? Marcel Machill and Markus Beiler  Chapter 11 Philosophical Linkages between Public Journalism and Citizen Journalism Linda Steiner and Jessica Roberts  Chapter 12 Toward a New(er) Sociability: Uses, Gratifications, and Social Capital on Facebook Zizi Papacharissi and Andrew Mendelson  Chapter 13 Minding the Digital Gap: Why Understanding Digital Inequality Matters Eszter Hargittai  Index

    Biography

    Stylianos Papathanassopoulos is Professor in Media Organisation and Policy and Head of the Faculty of Communication and Media Studies at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. He has written extensively on media developments in Europe. His previous publications include The European Media Landscape (with Ralph Negrine, 2011), Television in the 21st Century (2005), Media and Politics (2004) and European Television in the Digital Age (2002).

    "The examinations of various issues--networked communication, Internet journalism, new sociability, the digital gap--make these essays valuable, fresh resources in contemporary media studies... Summing Up: Highly recommended."
    --M. R. Grant, emerita, Wheaton College