Brains, Media and Politics

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Author_Rodolfo Leyva
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brains
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cognitive
cognitive science
cognitive socialisation
commercial media
Contemporary UK
developmental psycho-logy
developmental psychology
educational experiences
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ethnographic
ethnographic methodology
Gdp Growth
Hierarchical Regression Procedure
ideology reproduction
leisure activities
leisure practices
Likert Type Response Scale
media
Media Cultural Environments
media effects research
media-communications
Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System
minds
Mri Machine
neoliberal
neoliberal capitalism
neoliberal subjects
neoliberalism and young adults media exposure
Offline Participation
Offline Political Participation
political behaviour
political enculturation
political socialisation
politics
Receive Snap Benefit
Recent UK Study
Rodolfo Leyva
Significant Control Variables
SNS Content
SNS Post
SNS Usage
social
Social Comparison Dispositions
Social Reproduction
sociology
studies
subjectivities
subjects
survey
Teaching Evaluation Questionnaires
theory
UK
UK Electoral Commission
UK University Student
United Kingdom
United States
US
values
Web Survey Design
web-survey
Welfare Reform
welfare support
young adults
young people
youth

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032083681
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Following the 2007–2008 global financial crisis, a number of prominent academics, journalists, and activists were quick to pronounce the demise of neoliberal capitalism and governance. This rather optimistic prediction, however, underestimated the extent to which neoliberalism has shaped the 21st-century world order and become entrenched in our sociopolitical and cognitive fabric. Indeed, 11 years after the crisis, and in spite of the significant levels of socioeconomic inequality, psychological distress, and environmental destruction generated by neoliberal policies and corresponding business and cultural practices, the ideological hegemony of neoliberalism has not been supplanted, nor has it really faced any serious unsettling. How, then, has neoliberalism inflected and shaped our “common-sense” understandings of what is politically, economically, and culturally viable? To help answer this question, this book combines leading theories from sociology, media-communication research, developmental psychology, and cognitive science, and draws on primary evidence from a unique mix of ethnographic, survey, and experimental studies – of young people’s leisure practices and educational experiences, of young adults’ political socialisation processes in relation to exposure to social networking sites, and of the effects of commercial media viewing on material values and support for social welfare. In doing so, it provides a nuanced and robustly empirically tested account of how the conscious and non-conscious cognitive dimensions of people’s subjectivities and everyday social practices become interpellated through and reproductive of neoliberal ideology. As such, this book will appeal to scholars across the social and behavioural sciences with interests in neoliberalism, political engagement, enculturation, social reproduction, and media effects.

Rodolfo Leyva is a fellow in the Department of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.

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