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[Commlist] New book - The Media, the Public and The Great Financial Crisis
Wed Jan 30 16:53:50 GMT 2019
New Book Announcement
*The Media, The Public and The Great Financial Crisis *
*Mike Berry* *(Cardiff University)*
https://www.springer.com/gb/book/9781137499721#aboutBook
This book explores the impact of the print and broadcast media on public
knowledge and understanding of the 2008 Great Financial Crisis. It
represents the first systemic attempt to analyse how mass media
influenced public opinion and political events during this key period in
Britain's economic history. To do this the book combines analysis of
media content, focus groups with members of the public and interviews
with leading news journalists and editors in order to unpack the
production, content and reception of news.
The early part of the book examines how the banking crisis was reported
by Britain's media and the impact of this coverage on public attitudes
towards the crisis. Later chapters analyse how the debate over Britain's
public deficit was discussed by the print and broadcast media as well
how both short and long terms patterns of media socialisation were
crucial in legitimating the UK's turn to austerity.
*Praise for the book*
*
*
This is an enormously impressive book. It examines media reporting of
the financial crisis with great insight, using both quantitative and
qualitative methods, covering both press and broadcasting. It offers a
persuasive explanation of why the media reporting was so inadequate, and
a reception study indicating that this flawed reporting influenced
public perceptions. This book is important because it dissects how the
neo-liberal hegemony was maintained with the help of a tamed media in
the face of a devastating economic crisis whose impact is still being
felt a decade later. It will be of widespread interest to academics,
students and concerned citizens across the western world.-
*Professor**James Curran*, Goldsmiths College
The reverberations of the extraordinary financial crises that hit the
UK, and the western world generally, in 2008 are still being
experienced, and explained. A decade later, we remain bewildered by the
complexity of the shockwaves these events produced, whether in the form
of austerity policies, or in the rise of the political far right.
Berry’s important study of these unprecedented episodes looks at the
production, content, and reception of economic news about them and at
economic journalism more generally. It is indispensable for any full
understanding of the recent and current history of British capitalism’.
– *Professor Peter Golding*, Northumbria University, UK
If you want to know why we need to reform our media read this book.
Through detailed empirical research of news production, news content and
audience reception Berry reveals how the media were key to the public
understanding of and attitudes towards the financial crisis. He reveals
how a policy of austerity became acceptable and ultimately how the banks
got away with it. A brilliant exposition of the weaknesses of economic
journalism and how much we rely on it. Media power is interrogated and
found to be alive and kicking. How can the same practices be prevented
in the future? Read this book and find out. *Professor Natalie Fenton*,
Goldsmiths College.
While everyone has their anecdote, Mike Berry does the systematic data
collection and analysis that is essential for any serious discussion of
the media, and he does it very well. I have found his work both
interesting and highly important, and it has been essential to my own
understanding of public attitudes towards austerity. This book will be a
must read for anyone who has an interest in the media today.– *Professor
Simon Wren-Lewis*, University of Oxford
A book that explores two of the greatest media conundrums: how people
are influenced by press and broadcasting outletseven when they say they
distrust them; and how alternatives to the status quo are successfully
marginalised. - *Roy Greenslade , *Guardian
Many of us who argued for an alternative to no-strings-attached bank
bailouts followed by axe-wielding austerity in the wake of the 2008
financial meltdown have despaired at the mainstream media’s subservience
to the neoliberal consensus view that both of these policies were
inevitable. Mike Berry’s incisive and meticulous study of the
circumstances in which austerity came to dominate the media narrative,
and his conclusions on the implications for future progressive
governments in the UK, are essential reading. *Howard Reed*, Former
chief economist at the IPPR.
*Mike Berry* is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Journalism, Media and
Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK. His previous books include
/More Bad News from Israel/ (Pluto, 2011) and /Terrorism, Elections and
Democracy/ (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010) and he has produced research for
organisations such as the BBC Trust, UNHCR, TUC and NSPCC.
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