Archive for July 2024

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[Commlist] new book: News Aesthetics and Myth

Wed Jul 10 11:20:59 GMT 2024




New book – News Aesthetics and Myth

…….

Scholars with teaching or research pursuits in media aesthetics, media literacy, journalism studies, and critical studies may be interested in the new Routledge book /News Aesthetics and Myth: The Making of Media Illiteracy in India /by Shashidhar Nanjundaiah.

Booking is available with 20% discount with code AFLY02. Additional 5% discount for 2 copies with code FHQ4N74SH until July 31

About the book:
The book dismantles current understandings of media literacy by investigating how the maneuvers of our current news media lead to the construction of media illiteracy, using aesthetics to embed myths, in part by employing absentation and invisibilization as aesthetic maneuvers. The author asks us to consider the presence of media illiteracy in a world in which we are consumed by media, live a media life in a media ecosystem, surrounded by mediated communication.

Unpacking this paradoxical situation, the book proposes that before venturing into media literacy, we must first understand the workings of how mystification occurs. Departing from the idea that aesthetics work on an agreed set of principles between art and society, the book applies the ideology of aesthetics to news-based narration. The book offers the possibilities for a collectivistic, non-Western, postcolonialist model of learning by using the very collective and hierarchical identities of societies that must be critiqued.

Routledge editors write that “this vital and innovative book will be an important resource for scholars and students in the areas of media literacy and critical media literacy, media education, journalism, mass communication, aesthetics, and media technology." The work is theoretically fresh and aggressively provocative in its explanation of our mediated world in new ideological contexts. It includes two powerful case studies—one based on hypervisibilization (“India’s Potemkin Village,” as it is termed), the other on invisibilization, a heart-wrenching tale of brutalization in a dark and distant village—that build on its formulations. India serves as an exemplary locus for these studies, fraught as it is with far-right interventions and social media manipulations.

Table of contents:
Introduction: Is there a problem?
1. The discomfort with media literacy
2. Trust, promise, and duty
3. Post-reflexive modernity
4. Continuity in postcolonial narration
5. Aesthetics, presentation, absentation
6. Case study: The spectacle of India’s Potemkin village
7. News aesthetics and the narrative structure
8. Case study: Invisibility in Boolgarhi
9. Towards demystification of media illiteracy
10. An evaluative framework
Conclusion: Some reflections

Further details in this Routledge link: _https://www.routledge.com/News-Aesthetics-and-Myth-The-Making-of-Media-Illiteracy-in-India/Nanjundaiah/p/book/9781032755410

You may contact the author at (_shashidhar.c.n /at/ gmail.com)  for more information.

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