New media, campaigning and the 2008 Facebook election /

New media, campaigning and the 2008 Facebook election / New media, campaigning and the two thousand and eight Facebook election New media, campaigning and the two thousand eight Facebook election edited by Thomas J. Johnson and David D. Perlumutter. - viii, 130 pages ; 24 cm

"This book is a reproduction of Mass Communication and Society, Volume 13, issue 5"--T.p. verso.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: The Facebook Election / Intermedia Agenda-Setting and Political Activism:MoveOn.org and the 2008 Presidential Election / The 2008 Presidential Campaign: Political Cynicism in the age of Facebook, MySpace and YouTube / Did Social Media Really Matter? College Students' Use of Online Media and Political Decision Making in the 2008 Election / The 2008 Presidential Election / The Writing on the Wall: A Content Analysis of College Students' Facebook Groups for the 2008 Presidential Election / Thomas J. Johnson and David D. Perlmutter -- Matthew Ragas and Spiro Kiousis -- Gary Hanson and Paul Haridakis -- Matthew Kushin and Masahiro Yamamoto -- 2.0: A Content Analysis of User-Generated Political Facebook Groups -- Juliana Fernandes, Magda Giurcanu, Kevin Bowers and Jeffrey Neely. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

"Some political observers dubbed the 2008 presidential campaign as 'the Facebook Election'. Barack Obama, in particular, employed social media such as blogs, Twitter, Flickr, Digg, YouTube, MySpace and Facebook to run a 'grassroots-style' campaign. The Obama campaign was keenly aware that voters, particularly the young, are not simply consumers of information, but conduits of information as well. They often replaced the professional filter of traditional media with a social one. Social media allowed candidates to do electronically what previously had to be done through shoe leather and phone banks: contact volunteers and donors, and schedule and promote events. The 2008 Election marked a new era where the candidates no longer had complete control over their campaign message. The individual viewer in a campaign crowd with a cell phone can record a candidate's gaffe, post it on YouTube or Flickr and within days millions will be gasping or guffawing. The traditional campaign, with its centralized power and planning, although not dead, now coexists with an unstructured digital democracy. New Media, Campaigning and the 2008 Facebook Election examines the way social media changed how candidates campaigned, how the media covered the election and how voters received information. This book is based on a special issue of Mass Communication & Society."--Publisher's website.

0415673933 9780415673938


Presidents--Election--United States--2008
Online social networks--Political aspects--United States
Communication in politics--Technological innovations--United States
Political campaigns--Technological innovations--United States
Digital media--Political aspects--United States

JK526 2008 / .N49 2011

324.730973

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