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[ecrea] published: Communication, Politics and Culture Vol 49, Issue 2 (2016)
Mon Jan 16 18:46:17 GMT 2017
I am pleased to announce the publication of the latest issue of
Communication, Politics & Culture:
Volume 49, Issue 2 (2016)
It can be accessed at:
http://tinyurl.com/hkuezso
+++
Editorial – Technology, politics and identity (PDF 19 KB)
Chris Hudson
I need not remind readers that the revolution in communications
technology has radically altered the scope of approaches to
communication in its intersection with politics and culture. A glance at
a wide range of academic publications tells us that contemporary
research now seeks to answer questions about the role of technology in
structuring human relations and about their political manifestations,
amongst other issues. Profound social changes of the last decades,
including the proliferating use of social media accompanied by the rise
of the mediated self, globalisation, and the increasing power of
neo-liberal ideology, have precipitated changes and transformed studies
of communication. One significant shift in focus that would be wholly
expected in a journal dealing with contemporary issues in communication,
politics and culture has been the number of submissions dealing with
digital communication technologies. The articles in Volume 49, Issue 2
are all generally located in the context of technology, politics and
identity.
Vale Dr Peter Williams (PDF 30 KB)
Michael Dutton
Peter Williams was an Editorial Board member (and later Advisory Board
member) of Southern Review, which became Communication, Politics & Culture.
Despite blindness from the late 1990s, Peter continued to teach until
November 2014, and was an active researcher until his death, co-writing
a book on media and the government of populations (Palgrave, forthcoming).
Caught in the web: Male Goths using online ICTs to transcend rural
reality (PDF 108 KB)
Angela Ragusa and Olivia Ward
This empirical qualitative study explores male Goths’ lived experiences
in rural Australia. Offline, participants felt rural communities’
‘conservatism’ and hegemonic masculinity norms restricted their Goth
identity expression and subcultural participation. Further, their
commonly perceived homosexuality, irrespective of self-identified
sexuality, was believed responsible for much assault, ostracism, and
‘othering’ experienced in rural, but not urban, environments. To escape
rural realities and engage in ‘authentic’ identity expression,
participants vociferously interacted in online communities which, more
than augmenting offline reality, created opportunities systemically
impossible due to rurality and permitted subcultural participation and
self-identity expression they believed reduced isolation and positively
affected their mental health.
A straight gay wedding? News images of same-sex marriage in the
mainstream and alternative New Zealand press (PDF 269 KB)
Linda-Jean Kenix
New Zealand was the first country in Oceania and the fifteenth in the
world to allow same-sex marriage. This research explores whether the
visual re-presentations of same-sex marriage in newspaper coverage
surrounding the Parliamentary vote coalesced to form a heteronormative
or homonormative ‘image’ of gay marriage through an examination of 654
articles about gay marriage in the mainstream, New Zealand Herald, and
the alternative publication, GayNZ. This research asks whether there was
a difference in that re-presentation across ‘alternative’ and
‘mainstream’news media outlets given that visual codes of reference have
been suggested to shift within an alternative communicative space.
Understanding the Indonesian mediapolis: The role of social media during
the 2014 Indonesian presidential election (PDF 298 KB)
David Holmes and Sulistyanto
This article examines the role of social media during the 2014
Indonesian presidential election. It analyses how candidates used
Facebook and Twitter and how celebrities were enlisted to promote
candidates to their fans. The coinciding development of rapid internet
literacy, together with the introduction of a direct election system
that appeals to identity- and celebrity-driven politics, came together
to make social media a central part of Indonesian elections. This
confluence has radically altered the conduct of campaigns. In order to
explain this transformation, it is necessary to understand the nature of
the Indonesian mediated public sphere, characterised by strong
inter-media connections between social media and broadcast forms.
To censor or not to censor: Roots, current trends and the long-term
consequences of the Chinese Communist Party’s fear of the internet (PDF
251 KB)
Giovanni Navarria
This article explores the reasons behind the Chinese Communist Party’s
fear of digital media and outlines its effects on the Party’s approach
to the internet. By closely examining the heavily-contested field of
digital networked media, we see that the control of the internet in
China is not only based on censorship but that the Party has been
experimenting for some time with a variety of unusual quasi- democratic
strategies, each of them designed to go beyond the need for censorship;
each of them a new Party strategy to learn from its critics and win
public consent for its rule.
The July 20 plot: Reading news as myth in the imagining of the British
nation (PDF 111 KB)
Eloise Florence
This paper analyses foreign news articles that appeared in three London
newspapers during the Second World War, covering ‘The July 20 Plot’, an
assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler in 1944.
The analysis is supported by reading the news articles as an ‘other
world’ myth, through which characteristics of their own nation, imagined
by Britons, was observed as existing in opposition to that of the
Germany portrayed. International news is thus solidified as a source of
historical enquiry, as well as a site of discourse that can be examined
as the expression of mythological knowledge that typifies an imagined
national community.
Book reviews
Post-Yugoslav cinema: Towards a cosmopolitan imagining, by Dino Murtic,
(2015) (PDF 53 KB)
Reviewed by Hariz Halilovich
The Australian Greens: From activism to Australia’s third party, by
Stewart Jackson, (2016) (PDF 20 KB)
Reviewed by Geoff Robinson
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