TY - BOOK AU - Stanyer,James TI - Modern political communication SN - 0745627978 AV - JA85 .S73 2007 U1 - 320.014 22 PY - 2007/// CY - Cambridge PB - Polity KW - Communication in politics N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-212) and index; Part 1; Exclusion, Intimacy and the Drive for Popularity --; 1; Exclusive Campaign Communication: the Hidden Costs of Data Driven Electioneering --; 2; Governing and the Drive for Effective Promotion --; 3; Intimate Politicians: Mediated Visibility and the Erosion of Privacy --; Part 2; News and the Politics of Market Driven Media --; 4; News Organisations and the Audience for News --; 5; The Media and the Populist Political Impulse --; Part 3; Communicative Disengagement and the Exercise of Political Voice --; 6; Turning On, Tuning Out? --; 7; The Rise of Self-Expressive Politics: Exercising Political Voice in a Digital Age --; 8; Political Communication in an Uncertain and Unequal Age N2 - "Political communication systems in advanced industrial democracies are in a state of flux. The traditional political communication system, with its limited and regulated media channels, stable patterns of media consumption, and identifiable party loyalty, which characterized much of the twentieth century, is giving way to one that is less ordered and structured. This book provides an accessible and comprehensive account of how governments, political parties, established media organizations and citizen audiences, in the US and the UK, are adapting to this systemic change. Against the background of audience fragmentation and widening social and political divisions, James Stanyer provides a critical appraisal of the evolving relationship of political communicators and their audience. He argues that such divisions influence citizen communicative engagement and are increasingly exacerbated by the strategic activities of political advocates and media organizations. Modern Political Communication is required reading for anyone who wants a fuller understanding of the transformation of political communication and the repercussions for democracy."--Publisher's website ER -