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[ecrea] International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics 14.3 published
Mon Dec 10 19:01:23 GMT 2018
Intellect is happy to announce that the International Journal of Media &
Cultural Politics 14.3 is now available! This issue places focus on
politics in a post-truth era.
For more information about the issue, click here >>
https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3663/
Content
Politics in a post-truth era
Authors: Darren G. Lilleker
Democracy in a de-civilizing age: The rise of shameless personal truths
Authors: Richard Scullion And Stuart Armon
Discursive construction of truth, ideology and the emergence of
post-truth narratives in contemporary political communication
Authors: Anastasia Deligiaouri
This article provides a theoretical and philosophical investigation for
the discursive construction of truth based predominantly upon the
discourse theory of Laclau and Mouffe but also on insights drawn from
other scholars. As a theoretical article the aim is to contribute to the
understanding of post-truth as a recent phenomenon and elaborate on
several dimensions and aspects of it by employing a conceptual analysis
enriched with several references from recent literature and published
articles. Social truth as a social construction is a discourse with a
privileged signification power over masses. Therefore the conditions for
the construction of the discourse of truth are a focal topic for
analysis. On the other hand, the ‘post-truth’ concept, which invaded in
political life during 2016, puts into contestation several constitutive
and structural elements of truth and consequently democracy as it
currently functions in modern liberal states. The article is divided
into three sections: (1) The first section provides a theoretical
analysis on what is truth and how it is constructed as a discourse in a
society; (2) the second section discusses the concept of post-truth and
the possible reasons for the emergence of post-truth narratives in
contemporary political communication and (3) the last section delineates
the impact that post-truth narratives have on the political level, the
institutional level and the social level.
OPEN ACCESS Online media impact on politics. Views on post-truth
politics and postpostmodernism
Authors: Susana Salgado
Most of what is considered post-truth politics refers to known features
of politics and political propaganda. These are old phenomena boosted by
technology, and in particular by social media. To examine the background
and genesis of post-truth politics, this article integrates in the
analysis the impact of online media and the relativism of postmodernity,
in which the truth is always a discursive construction, never a
discovery. It also examines populism in the light of this approach. The
analysis concludes that all these elements play a definite role in
post-truth politics and that the so-called post-truth era is not simply
a by-product of populism; relativism, the media and the uses of
technology also play an important role.
Is post-truth another word for political spin or a radical departure
from it? Evidence from behind the scenes in UK government
communications: 1997–2015
Authors: Ruth Garland
The charge of political spin, as a biased and self-advantaging form of
public communication practiced by media and political actors, is thought
to have developed alongside 24/7 media during the 1990s. More recently,
the critique of the political arts of persuasion has deepened with the
more serious charge of post-truth. Here, facts are deemed as malleable
and subservient to beliefs, and indeed, can be strategically deployed to
serve beliefs. This article draws on data from in-depth interviews with
media and political actors and the analysis of key documents to examine
the charge of political spin as applied to government communications,
taking the United Kingdom since 1997 as a case study. It considers
whether post-truth is just another word for the same phenomenon or a
radical departure from it. Both charges can be seen as outcomes of the
increasing mediatization of politics whereby complex sociopolitical
issues are simplified into narratives and slogans, election campaigning
becomes an integral part of the everyday process of governing and
political imperatives challenge the scope within government for the
scrutiny of verifiable facts and truths. However, the stance taken by
these charges in relation to evidence, and their acknowledgement of the
role of accountability in public life and as part of the democratic
process, are radically different. The article concludes that, far from
being another word for ‘political spin’, ‘post-truth’ is a radical
departure from it that signals a serious development: the crisis in
public communication characterized by a growing public distrust in
government and the democratic process.
‘Searching for something to believe in’: Voter uncertainty in a
post-truth environment
Authors: Darren G. Lilleker And Mirjam Liefbroer
As other authors in this collection have stated, post-truth came into
common parlance as commentators analysed and reflected on election
campaigns and their results: the suggestion being that emotions and
beliefs had become more powerful than reasoned, fact-based
argumentation. Given that most campaigns present their own redacted
perspective of reality into an environment containing multiple,
contested alternative interpretations, the association between the most
contested variant of a campaign, a political contest and post-truth is
unsurprising. All campaigns contain elements of post-truth, appeals to
emotions that build bridges between that which is sold and the identity
of the consumer. Campaigns may encourage people to think but also to
feel, and as such campaign strategies chime with understandings of human
engagement and the levels of cognitive attention given, with many
decisions being gut responses rather than being carefully considered.
Our research focuses on two UK contests: the 2016 referendum on
membership of the EU and the subsequent 2017 snap general election.
Interviews among older voters who voted to leave the EU and younger
voters who supported Corbyn-led Labour provide insights into how what
might be seen as peripheral aspects influenced voting decisions. The
data we suggest highlight challenges for democratic institutions as
populist voices present themselves as change agents to win support from
voters dissatisfied with consensus politics. Mainstream politicians
meanwhile are mistrusted while the arguments of outsiders who appear
authentic are given credence. Such observations go to the heart of
issues facing democracy and place debates surrounding post-truth as core
to those challenges. This article offers insights into how voter choices
reveal cognitive processes that explain the link between campaign
communication, belief formation and voter choice-making, all of which
combine to threaten democracy.
Post-truth, propaganda and the transformation of the spiral of silence
Authors: Stamatis Poulakidakos And Anastasia Veneti And Christos
Fangonikolopoulos
The crisis of democratic culture?
Authors: Mark J. Bendall And Chris Robertson
Reasonable truth
Authors: Melanie Klinkner
Psychological underpinnings of post-truth politics
Authors: Barry Richards
Book Reviews
Authors: Brian Hughes And Kurt Wirth
The Toxic Meritocracy of Video Games: Why Gaming Culture is the Worst,
Christopher A. Paul (2018)
Antisocial Media: How Facebook Disconnects Us and Undermines Democracy,
Siva Vaidhyanathan (2018)
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