Politics, Society, and the Media is the first comprehensive political sociology of the media to be published in Canada. Paul Nesbitt-Larking draws upon a range of disciplines, including cultural and media studies, political economy, social theory, and political science to provide an analysis of the relationship between power and representation in Canada.
The framework for the book presents a model of the mutual interaction between politics and the media. Attention is focused in the early chapters on how cultural, ideological, economic, and governmental forces shape and condition the production of media in Canada. Chapters on the work of Innis, Grant, McLuhan, and their postmodern successors place the evolution of McLuhan's theoretical argument that ""the medium is the message"" at the heart of the book. Canadian identity, and how to understand Canadian media politically, is the subject of a chapter on textual analysis. Two extensive chapters follow on the media's influence and effects on politics.
In addition to standard topics on politics and the media, this new edition offers much more: an examination of the media on the politics of gender and aboriginal peoples, the micro-politics of the media workplace, and an exploration of important media-related considerations. Throughout, reference is made to relevant and compelling issues placed within the context of media theory.
By:
Paul Nesbitt-Larking
Imprint: Broadview Press Ltd
Country of Publication: United States
Edition: Second Edition
Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Spine: 23mm
Weight: 560g
ISBN: 9781551118123
ISBN 10: 1551118122
Pages: 277
Publication Date: 01 January 2007
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Acknowledgements Why? How? What? Press Gangs: The Role of the Newspaper in Canadian Political Life The Masses and the Masseys: The Political History of Broadcasting in Canada The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Culture, Ideology, and the Media (Almost) Everywhere They Are in Chains: The Political Economy of Communications in Canada Sticks, Carrots, and Party Favours: State and Political Regulation of the Media Life in the Sausage Factory: Possibilities and Constraints of Media Organizations The Decline and Fall of the American Empire: Space and Time in the Work of Innis, Grant, and McLuhan Mass Rallies, Mass Consumption, and (Mass) Confusion: Approaches to the Media in the Postmodern World Drums and Wires: The Political Deconstruction of Canadian Texts Moving Voters, Moving Accounts, and Moving Wallpaper: The Politics of Reading Lies, Damn Lies, and Opinion Polls: Do the Media Massage the Message? From Experience to Editorial: Gatekeeping, Agenda-Setting, Priming, and Framing Social Responsibility and Antisocial Irresponsibility: Ethics, Participation, Political Activism, and the Media Bibliography Index
Paul Nesbitt-Larking is Associate Professor and Chair of Political Science at Huron University College in London, Ontario. A regular commentator on television and radio, his publications on Canadian and comparative politics include articles in The Canadian Journal of Political Science, The Journal of Legislative Studies, and Political Psychology. He is co-producer of the DVD, Conversations on Canadian Politics, and is author of the forthcoming book, The Political Psychology of Globalization.
Reviews for Politics, Society, and the Media
...it is not only the best introduction available to students of media and communications but is also an essential text for anyone with a serious interest in journalism history, the inner workings of news media and their impact on politics and society in general. Nesbitt-Larking has a rare gift for explaining the intricacies of various communication theories clearly and meaningfully. His special contribution is to relate these theories, most of them put forward by American or European scholars, 'within the context of the essential character of Canadian historical development.' As far as I am aware, this has not been done before, certainly not as competently or as clearly. -- Peter Desbarats