Patterns of Internet and Traditional News Media Use in a Networked Community |
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Authors: | Sam Lehman‐Wilzig |
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Affiliation: | Department of Political Studies and Institute of Public Communications , Bar‐Ilan University , Ramat Gan, 52900, Israel |
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Abstract: | Abstract International communication has come increasingly under the impact of at least three major technological, socio‐economic, and political forces: expanded channels of communication provided by technological developments, democratizing pressures that have brought new voices to be heard in international media and forums, and new but as yet weak mechanisms for the conduct of meaningful dialogue and negotiations. Power politics has been thus increasingly supplemented or supplanted by image politics, questioning traditional boundaries between domestic and international politics, and creating image fixations that have proved occasionally inimical to accommodation of real interests. The symbolic uses of images, on the other hand, have served at least three kinds of cognitive interests: national solidarity, and domestic instrumental and global community. The Iranian hostage crisis, among a number of other contemporary examples, illustrates how these interests were served, symbolically and actually, in domestic as well as international politics. Through a case study of the hostage crisis, me paper concludes with some warnings on the potentials as well as menaces of image politics. |
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Keywords: | Media effects intermedia influence political communication media coverage protest and television TV strike |
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