The Media and The Public: "Them" and "Us" in Media Discourse

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Author: Stephen Coleman

ISBN-10: 1405160411

ISBN-13: 9781405160414

Category: Media - General & Miscellaneous

The Media and the Public explores the ways a range of media, from the press to television to the Internet, have constructed and represented the public.\ \ Provides a new synthesis of recent research exploring the relationship between media and their publics\ Identifies ways in which different publics are subverting the gatekeeping of mainstream media in order to find a voice and communicate with others\ Situates contemporary media-public discourse and relationships in an historical context in...

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The Media and the Public explores the ways a range of media, from the press to television to the Internet, has constructed and represented the public. Stephen Coleman and Karen Ross argue that the public is always a product of representation, that there is no a priori public that is captured or recorded by the media. Instead, the public is invoked through processes of mediation that are dominated by political, institutional, economic, and cultural forces. Twenty-first century publics witness themselves more than any public in history – in vox pops, phone-ins, studio-audience discussions, soap opera dramatizations, reality TV formats, and beyond – but they do not control their own image. Mediated publics are vulnerable to misrepresentation by media images that fail to reflect their diversity and complexity. Through an exploration of citizen journalism, street newspapers, participatory media, online public consultations, and the blogosphere, Stephen Coleman and Karen Ross identify a more comprehensive and diverse set of public voices who are using media outlets to speak for themselves.

Acknowledgments Introduction. Them and us: Meet Joe the Plumber 1. Imagining the public 2. Public spheres 3. The managed public 4. Counterpublics and alternative media 5. Virtual publicness 6. Fractured publics, contested publicness Notes Bibliography