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Research Handbook on Political Propaganda [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 464 pages, height x width: 244x169 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789906415
  • ISBN-13: 9781789906417
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 256,29 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 464 pages, height x width: 244x169 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789906415
  • ISBN-13: 9781789906417
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This timely Research Handbook draws on a wide range of international case studies to assess the transformative impact of modern communication landscapes on political propaganda. From Brexit to Donald Trump, from presidential elections in Mexico to political rallies in India, from fake news to Cambridge Analytica, contributors demonstrate the ways in which growing digital platforms have amplified the reach and influence of political propaganda.





International contributors dissect current political contexts, with a key focus on the growth of populism, nationalism, and alt-right politics, to understand how propaganda contributes to the formation and organization of political cultures. Chapters pay close attention to recent election campaigns across Europe, Asia, and the Americas and analyse political and cultural information wars that have been fuelled by misinformation and the so-called fake news in digital media. Bringing together pioneering empirical research into contemporary communication, campaigning, journalism, and new media in a new political age, this Research Handbook provides a critical understanding of how propaganda contributes to the modern exercise of power globally.





Offering interdisciplinary perspectives on an issue at the forefront of contemporary politics, this Research Handbook is a crucial resource for both scholars and students of international politics and relations, security, communications, and media studies. Its practical insights into political campaigning and new media will also benefit policymakers, governments, and citizens in handling key challenges posed to the healthy functioning of political systems by propaganda.
List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Introduction to the Research Handbook on Political Propaganda 1(6)
Gary D. Rawnsley
Yiben Ma
Kruakae Pothong
1 World propaganda and personal insecurity: intent, content, and contentment
7(21)
Naren Chitty
2 Fake news, trust, and behaviour in a digital world
28(13)
Terry Flew
3 Cambridge Analytica
41(10)
David R. Carroll
4 `Believe me': political propaganda in the age of Trump
51(16)
Gary D. Rawnsley
5 The information war paradox
67(13)
Peter Pomerantsev
6 Digital propaganda as symbolic convergence: the case of Russian ads during the 2016 US presidential election
80(18)
Corneliu Bjola
Ilan Manor
7 Getting the message right in Xi Jinping's China: propaganda, story-telling, and the challenge of reaching people's emotions
98(13)
Kerry Brown
8 Political communication in the age of media convergence in China
111(16)
Xiaoling Zhang
Yiben Ma
9 Xi Jinping's grand strategy for digital propaganda
127(16)
Titus C. Chen
10 Constructing its own reality: the CCP's agenda for the Hong Kong anti-extradition bill movement
143(13)
Luwei Rose Luqiu
11 Sexuality and politics: `coming out' in German and Chinese queer films
156(12)
Hongwei Bao
12 The compassion `spectacle': the propaganda of piety, virtuosity, and altruism within neoliberal politics
168(15)
Colin Alexander
13 Political propaganda and the global struggle against Apartheid, 1948-1994
183(14)
Nicholas J. Cull
14 Refugees, migration, and propaganda
197(14)
Gillian McFadyen
15 Brexit uncertainties: political rhetoric versus British core values in the NHS
211(13)
Georgia Spiliopoulos
16 The media, antisemitism, and political warfare in Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party, 2015-2019
224(19)
James R. Vaughan
17 Terrorist propaganda
243(14)
Afzal Ashraf
18 Propaganda through participation: counterterrorism narratives in China
257(13)
Chi Zhang
19 Countermeasures to extremist propaganda: a strategy for countering absolutist religious beliefs in northeast Nigeria
270(15)
Jacob Udo-Udo Jacob
20 Imagined minorities: making `real' images of ethnic harmony in Chinese tourism
285(15)
Melissa Shani Brown
David O'Brien
21 The language of protest: slogans and the construction of tourism contestation in Barcelona
300(15)
Neil Hughes
22 The Mexican 2018 presidential election in the media landscape: newspaper coverage, TV spots, and Twitter interaction
315(18)
Ruben Arnoldo Gonzalez
23 Political propaganda and memes in Mexico: the 2018 presidential election
333(14)
Penelope Franco Estrada
Gary D. Rawnsley
24 Political parties, rallies, and propaganda in India
347(12)
Andrew Wyatt
25 Media and majoritarianism in India: eroding soft power?
359(14)
Daya Thussu
26 Korean cultural diplomacy in Laos: soft power, propaganda, and exploitation
373(17)
Mary J. Ainslie
27 Fact-checking false claims and propaganda in the age of post-truth politics: the Brexit referendum
390(15)
Jen Birks
28 Beyond the smear word: media literacy educators tackle contemporary propaganda
405(16)
Renee Hobbs
Index 421
Edited by Gary D. Rawnsley, Professor of Public Diplomacy, School of International Studies and Dean, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Nottingham Ningbo China, China, Yiben Ma, Convenor of the Preliminary Year Programme for International Communications, Centre for English Language Education, University of Nottingham Ningbo China, China and Kruakae Pothong, Visiting Research Fellow, Department of Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK