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E-grāmata: Social Media and Political Communication [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(University of Nebraska at Omaha, USA)
  • Formāts: 210 pages, 1 Tables, black and white; 6 Line drawings, black and white; 20 Halftones, black and white; 26 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jul-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003170471
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 155,64 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 222,34 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 210 pages, 1 Tables, black and white; 6 Line drawings, black and white; 20 Halftones, black and white; 26 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jul-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003170471
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book offers a wide-scale, interdisciplinary analysis and guide to social media and political communication, examining the political use of social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

From disinformation to artificial intelligence, Jeremy Lipschultz explores how social media tools are being deployed by "good" and "bad" political actors. The use of "fake news" or disinformation is clearly contextualized for readers within a wider understanding of the historic uses of propaganda, persuasion and political advertising. Lipschultz also examines how social media is used by activists and social movements to increase civic engagement and amplify social issues. The book surveys traditional media communication theories and methods, exploring newsgatekeeping, propaganda, persuasion and personal influence, and diffusion of new technologies and ideas, teaching vital critical thinking methods for consuming, engaging with, and understanding political social media content from a media literacy perspective. It also includes social network analyses which offer visual representations of social media crowds that influence social movements and political change.

Essential reading for students of Media and Cultural Studies, Communication, Journalism, Political Science, and Information Technology, as well as anyone wishing to understand the current intersection of social media and politics.
Preface ix
1 Infroduction to Global Political and Social Media Communication
1(22)
Box 1.1 Twitter Suspension of Donald Trump
7(3)
Political Campaigns, Social Movements and Activism
10(4)
Box 1.2 Social Movements and Social Media Relations
10(4)
Political Content
14(1)
Partisan Posts
15(1)
Box 1.3 Case Study: Union Safety Issues
15(1)
Government Responses
16(3)
Discussion Questions
19(1)
References
19(4)
2 Social Media Communication Theories
23(16)
Return to Media Communication Theories, Concepts, Constructs and Models
25(5)
Box 2.1 Pandemic Personal Influence Via Facebook
26(2)
Box 2.2 Doximity Community Guidelines
28(2)
Fighting Knowledge Gaps
30(1)
Uses and Gratification
31(2)
Emerging Theories
33(1)
Persuasion and Public Relations
33(2)
Case Study: How Keyword Targeting Influences What You See
35(1)
Discussion Questions
36(1)
References
36(3)
3 Political and Social Media Communication Methods
39(20)
Survey Data and Public Opinion
40(1)
Experimental Research
41(2)
Content Analysis
43(1)
Thematic and Rhetorical Analysis
44(1)
Social Network Analysis
44(6)
Box 3.1 Thought Leader: Marc A. Smith
45(5)
Qualitative, Critical and Cultural Studies
50(2)
Historical, Legal and Ethical Research
52(1)
Case Study: Delta Virus Misinformation
52(4)
Discussion Questions
56(1)
References
57(2)
4 Developing Meaningful Political Communication Questions
59(20)
Disinformation and Political Issues
60(1)
Political Structures, Power, Influence and Leadership
61(1)
Boundaries and Power
62(3)
Box 4.1 Facebook's Power
64(1)
Social Conflict and the News
65(1)
Political Communication Thought Leadership
66(3)
Box 4.2 Thought Leader: Rhiannon B. Kallis
67(2)
Table 4.1 Subreddit Forum Data
69(4)
Case Study: Anti-Vax Influence
73(1)
Discussion Questions
74(1)
References
74(5)
5 Academic and Industry Social Media Data
79(10)
Box 5.1 Successful U.S. Newsrooms Pivoted Toward Digital and Social Media
81(3)
The Barcelona 3.0 Principles
84(1)
Case Study: The Facebook Files
85(2)
Industry Change Tension
87(1)
Discussion Questions
87(1)
References
87(2)
6 Propaganda and Social Media Persuasion
89(22)
Social Media Sites and Hate Speech
91(1)
Black, White and Grey Propaganda
92(2)
Persuasion and Attitude Change Research
94(8)
Box 6.1 Thought Leader: Jennifer M. Grygiel
95(7)
Case Study: Inside Facebook
102(4)
Box 6.2 Understanding Sustainability Within SMC and Policy-making
104(2)
Discussion Questions
106(1)
References
106(5)
7 Normative Law, Ethics and Critical Examination
111(22)
Free Expression Values or Strict Government Control
115(1)
U.S. Marketplace of Ideas Approaches
116(1)
Hate Speech, Cyberbullying and Revenge Porn
117(1)
Commercial Speech, Disclosure, Transparency and the First Amendment
117(8)
Box 7.1 Case Study: Murphy v. Twitter, Inc. (2021)
119(2)
Box 7.2 Case Study: Nunes v. Lizza, 12 F.4,h 890 (8,h Circuit, 2021)
121(4)
Normative Law and Ethics
125(5)
Discussion Questions
130(1)
References
130(3)
8 Social Media Processes and Effects
133(18)
Case Study: #BlackLivesMatter Social Network Analysis
134(1)
Trusted Communication
135(1)
Criminal Justice Reform
136(1)
#BlackLives Matter Data
137(5)
Interpretation and Future Research
142(1)
Trust and Transparency
143(3)
Box 8.1 Cornel West Tweets Harvard Letter
144(2)
Discussion Questions
146(1)
References
146(5)
9 Media and Information Literacy
151(20)
HCI, CMC and SMC
153(1)
Media Richness and Social Presence Revisited
154(1)
Credibility, Trust and Misinformation
155(2)
Box 9.1 Healthy Skepticism
156(1)
News Deserts
157(9)
Box 9.2 Thought Leader: Gemma Puglisi
158(8)
Revisiting Political Communication
166(1)
Discussion Questions
167(1)
References
167(4)
10 Technologies of Freedom and Oppression
171(20)
Celebrities, Technologies and Influence Issues
173(1)
Political Campaign Issues
174(2)
Social Movement and Activism
176(2)
Box 10.1 Objectivity and Activism
176(2)
Al Issues
178(2)
Box 10.2 Apple Cloud Data Privacy Concerns
178(2)
Blockchain Web3 Trust and Verification Issues
180(4)
Reconceptualizing Social Media and Political Communication
184(2)
Discussion Questions
186(1)
References
187(4)
Glossary 191(15)
Index 206
Jeremy Harris Lipschultz is Peter Kiewit Distinguished Professor of Communication, University of Nebraska at Omaha. He leads the UNO Social Media Lab for Research and Engagement. Lipschultz is an editor for Journalism & Mass Communication Educator, and has authored numerous books about media, Internet and social media. @JeremyHL #smpc2023 tweets