1st Edition
Media Messages in the 2022 Midterm Election Division, Deniers, Dobbs, and the Donald
Chapter 1: Media, Messaging, and the Midterms: Communication Dynamics in the 2022 U.S. Elections SECTION I: AMPLIFIED DOUBTS: CONSPIRACY THEORIES, COMMUNICATION, AND THE 2022 MIDTERM ELECTIONS Chapter 2: Conspiratorial Ideation, Election Denial, and Voter Choice Chapter 3: 2000 Mules: A Story of Consequences and Conspiracy SECTION II: FRAMING THE DEBATE: HOW ISSUES SHAPED 2022 CANDIDATE COMMUNICATION Chapter 4: Post-Roe Politics: Priming, Framing, and the Dynamics of Abortion Discourse in Congressional Campaigns Chapter 5: Winning Stories Amid Partisanship: Narratives in Political Advertisements and Overperforming Candidates in the 2022 U.S. Midterm Election Chapter 6: How Congress Managed Social Media Agenda Fracture and Inversion during the 2022 Election SECTION III: NEWS NARRATIVES: 2022 MEDIA COVERAGE AND PUBLIC PERCEPTION Chapter 7: The Impact of Digital Partisan News Algorithms in the 2022 Midterm Election Chapter 8: Reply "STOP": Dominant Media Frames of SMS-Based Political Communication as a Consumer Problem Chapter 9: Of Red Waves, Election Deniers, Candidate Quality and Other Issues: Political Cartoons during the 2022 Midterm Elections SECTION IV: MIDTERM COMMUNICATION IN THE STATES: CASE STUDIES FROM ARIZONA, NEVADA, FLORIDA, TEXAS, AND KANSAS Chapter 10: The Limits of Being “100% Pro-Life:” Rhetorical Trajectory and Abortion in the American Southwest Chapter 11: Florida’s 2022 Senate Race: Social Media, Social Justice, and Partisanship Chapter 12: The Centrality of Citizen-as-Consumer: A Study of the 2022 Texas Midterms and the Failing Concept of the Marketplace of Ideas in a Digital Era Chapter 13: Gendered Treatment in the Communication Strategy of a Female Gubernatorial Candidate
Biography
John Allen Hendricks is Chair of the Department of Media & Communication and Professor at Stephen F. Austin State University, a member of the University of Texas System, where he teaches courses in communication theory, research methods, First Amendment law, and media and politics. He is the recipient of book awards from the National Communication Association (NCA) and the Broadcast Education Association (BEA).
Dan Schill is Professor in the School of Communication Studies and Affiliate Professor in Political Science at James Madison University, where he teaches courses in advocacy, political communication, research methods, and media and politics. His research focuses on communication, politics, media, and technology.
There is a paucity of research on communication and midterm elections in the field of political communication, pointing up a lack of knowledge of the agenda dynamics of midterms, the impact of media frames, and how media and politics intersect to influence voter choices in Congressional elections. In this edited volume, John Allen Hendricks and Dan Schill help redress this imbalance by focusing on the critical 2022 midterm elections, with chapters organized around how conspiracy theories, media frames, and news narratives influenced the campaign trajectory. Given the political importance of the 2022 midterms, this book goes a long way toward illuminating our knowledge of how media messages – based on both legitimate issues and conspiratorial ideation – influenced the contours of the campaign.
Richard M. Perloff, Distinguished Professor of Communication and Political Science, Cleveland State University
The 2022 Midterm Election was something of a puzzle — until this book came along. In its pages, accomplished and promising scholars offer fascinating studies regarding political communication via traditional and new media channels. This book offers vital findings regarding the continuing evolution of campaign discourse in our highly volatile political era.
Stephen J. Farnsworth, Ph.D, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, University of Mary Washington
The book’s lineup of distinguished scholars illuminate the complex interplay between candidate strategies, traditional media, new media, and voter preferences. A must-read for anyone – scholar, student, practitioner, or citizen – seeking to understand the media’s evolving election role.
Thomas E. Patterson, Bradlee Professor of Government & the Press, Harvard University






