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[ecrea] Public Relations Capitalism: Promotional Culture, Publics & Commercial Democracy
Thu Jan 25 21:58:10 GMT 2018
*Some colleagues may be interested in my new book:*
**
*Cronin, Anne M. (2018) /Public Relations Capitalism: Promotional
Culture, Publics and Commercial Democracy/. Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan.***
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-319-72637-3
This book argues that we are witnessing the emergence of ‘commercial
democracy’ in which public relations, promotional culture and the media
play a new, central role. As the conventional democratic promise of
political representation loses traction with the public in many
countries, commercial culture steps into this vacuum by offering mirror
forms of democracy. Commercial democracy promises representation, voice
and agency to the public and in doing so creates new forms of social
contract. Based on empirical material, this book examines PR produced by
corporations and communications produced by charities in an intensely
mediatized society. It presents a novel analysis of the shifting
significance of brand and reputation. It analyses the ascendancy of
commercial speech, PR’s relationship to post-truth politics, and the
transformation of cultural intermediaries into ‘social brokers’. As PR
and promotional culture come to inhabit the realm of the social contract
and new forms of politics, ‘the public’ and the very idea of ‘publicity’
are transformed.
**
*Chapter 1 introduction*
In this chapter Cronin outlines the key argument of the book – today we
are witnessing a profound shift in the public’s engagement with the
social contract as the basis of democracy and public relations,
alongside other forms of promotional culture, plays a central role in
this new development. New forms of ‘the public’ and ‘publicity’ are
being created and significant changes in social values are being forged
in the context of neoliberal capitalism. Cronin argues that a new
‘commercial democracy’ is emerging which transforms politics and
political engagement, politicising promotional culture in new ways.
*Chapter 2 Public relations, publics, publicity: neoliberal capitalism’s
media and mediation*
This chapter outlines today’s media landscape and sets it in the context
of democracy in neoliberal capitalism. Drawing on empirical data, the
chapter discusses the profound changes that are occurring in journalism
and the new opportunities such changes offer public relations to speak
to publics. Cronin outlines how Hannah Arendt’s account of the social
contract as ‘promise’ between government and people is a useful tool for
understanding today’s ‘democratic deficit’ or ‘crisis in democracy’ and
can offer important ways of analysing the new social and political role
that public relations plays.
**
*Chapter 3 * *Commercial democracy and a new social contract: Brands and
corporate reputation as ‘commercial promises’*
This chapter argues that we are witnessing the emergence of a
‘commercial democracy’ in which public relations and promotional culture
play a far more central mediating role. Drawing on empirical material
about PR produced by corporations, Cronin argues that as the
conventional social contract between government and people erodes in
forms of ‘democratic deficit’, new forms of contracts (or promises) as
being established between the commercial world of corporations and
brands and the public. In mediating between a corporation and the
public, PR promises a mirror-form of democracy with significance
consequences. Cronin offers a novel account of the significance of
brands and of corporations’ reputation in the context of major shifts
towards ‘commercial democracy’.
**
*Chapter 4 Charity PR and the production of social values*
Cronin uses empirical material to argue that charity PR or
communications create a particular form of bond with the public which
reworks social values in a shifting neoliberal context. The chapter
outlines how charity fund-raising and the publics that are addressed by
charity PR have become a newly intensified site of controversy and
struggle. Charities compete more intensively with each other for funding
while charities’ targeting of publics has become highly contentious.
Cronin argues that charities now offer forms of social contract or
‘promise’ as the conventional social contract between government and the
people is becoming debased and distrusted. This reframes the
significance of emotion in charity campaigns as it references the broken
promises of neoliberal capitalism and democracy.**
*Chapter 5 Conclusion: Promotional culture, PR as commercial speech, and
the politics of lying*
This chapter argues that the social and political significance of
‘commercial speech’ (PR, advertising, marketing) is intensifying due to
its enhanced role in forging promises or contracts. The chapter explores
the relationship of commercial speech to practices of lying, practices
of the imagination, and a ‘post-truth’ politics. Cronin argues that
these developments shift PR practitioners’ role from that of cultural
intermediaries to that of ‘social brokers’ of promises or contracts.
PR’s capacities to both /manage truths/ and to /broker new forms of
promise/ place PR in a privileged position in today’s new
socio-political context. This represents a reconfiguration of
promotional culture, according it a heightened social, political and
economic significance as it comes to inhabit more centrally the realm of
the promise or the social contract.
/“This book offers important insights about the role and significance of
public relations in neoliberal societies. Theoretically rich and
empirically grounded, it examines PR in both the commercial and charity
sectors, developing a challenging, if rather unsettling, set of
arguments about the displacement of political engagement and the
emergence of ‘commercial democracy’.”/
Maureen McNeil, Emeritus Professor.
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