Conservative Political Communication

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algorithmic news curation
asymmetric
Automated Accounts
bias
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conservatism
Conservative Media
conservative voter behavior
Contemporary conservatism
data
Dog Whistles
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Factual Importance
filter bubble
Follow
Fox News
fragmentation
GOP Candidate
Huffington Post Internet Site
Information ecosystems
journalism
mass communication
media
media ecosystem
media effects research
misinformation studies
News Diets
NPR
OLS Regression
Outrage Industry
OWS
partisan identity formation
partisan media
partisan messages
Partisan Selective Exposure
polarization
Policy Issues
Political communication
political incivility analysis
political science
politics
press
propoganda
Protest Paradigm
radio
Republican Stance
Republican Women
research
right wing media
Selective Exposure
Semantic Network Analysis
social media
social media polarization trends
social psychology
Tea Party
Tea Party Members
Tea Party Movement
Tea Party Organizations
television
Tv Ad

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815393856
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Conservative Political Communication examines the evolution of appeals, media, and tactics in right-wing media and political communication, tracking trends and shifts from the early days of contemporary conservatism in the 1950s to the Trump administration.

The chapters in this edited volume feature the work of senior and junior scholars from the fields of communication, journalism, and political science employing content analytic, experimental, survey, historical, and rhetorical research methodologies. Analyses of the rise of the 24-hour news cycle, the range of partisan news sources, and the role of social media algorithms in political campaigns yield insights for our media and information ecosystems. A key theme across these chapters is how right-wing channels and communications help and hinder partisan fragmentation, a condition whereby novice elected officials create personal conservative brands, appeal to the base through partisan media, and complicate senior leadership’s ability to engage in bargaining, compromise, and deal-making. This volume interrogates conservative media and messaging to track where these processes came from, how they functioned in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, and where they may be going in the future.

This book will interest scholars and upper-level students of political communication, media and politics, and political science, as well as readers invested in today’s political media landscape in the United States.

Sharon E. Jarvis is Professor, Department of Communication Studies, and Associate Director of Research at the Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Life at the University of Texas at Austin. Her books include Votes That Count and Voters Who Don’t: How Journalists Sideline Electoral Participation (Without Even Knowing It) (with Soo-Hye Han), Political Keywords: Using Language that Uses Us (with Roderick P. Hart, Deborah Smith-Howell, and William Jennings), and Talk of the Party: Political Labels, Symbolic Capital & American Life. Her research focuses on political language, partisan communication, and persuasion.