Results for ' media talk'

978 found
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  1.  22
    Everyday Talk on Twitter: Informal Deliberation About (Ir-)responsible Business Conduct in Social Media Arenas.Daniel Lundgaard & Michael Etter - 2023 - Business and Society 62 (6):1201-1247.
    Recent research has damped initial promises for democratic deliberation in social media arenas. Empirical studies find only low degrees of direct reciprocal interaction among participants, a lack of consensus orientation, and accelerated forms of communication that fail to meet traditional ideals of deliberation. In line with recent literature, we argue that traditional deliberative ideals are too narrow to embrace the potential contribution of social media for deliberation about (ir-)responsible business conduct. Instead, we propose to conceptualize social media (...)
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  2. Searchable Talk: Hashtags and Social Media Metadiscourse.[author unknown] - 2018
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  3.  5
    Talking to the Media: An Australian Perspective.D. A. Ipp - 1998 - Legal Ethics 1 (2):123-125.
  4.  9
    Children talking television: The salience and functions of media content in child peer interactions.Michal Hamo & Zohar Kampf - 2015 - Discourse and Communication 9 (4):465-485.
    The study aims at exploring the salience and functions of media and television contents in children’s lives by focusing on their uses as a discursive resource in naturally occurring peer talk. We observed and recorded Israeli children talk in everyday, natural settings in two separate studies, in 1999–2002 and in 2012–2013. Detailed discourse analysis of television-based interactions from an ethnographic, child-centered perspective reveals the enduring centrality of television as an enjoyable, available, and shared cultural resource with valuable (...)
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  5.  15
    We need to talk about Heidegger: essays situating Martin Heidegger in contemporary media studies.Justin Michael Battin & German A. Duarte (eds.) - 2018 - New York: Peter Lang.
    This collection assembles a number of chapters engaging different strands of Martin Heidegger_s philosophy in order to explore issues relevant to contemporary media studies. Following the release of Heidegger_s controversial Black Notebooks and the subsequent calls to abandon the philosopher, this book seeks to demonstrate why Heidegger, rather than be pushed aside and shunned by media practitioners, ought to be embraced by and further incorporated into the discipline, as he offers unique and often innovative pathways to address, and (...)
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  6. Speaking Up and Talking Back? Media Empowerment and Civic Engagement among East and Southern African Youth.[author unknown] - 2013
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  7.  16
    Participation and deliberative discourse on social media – Wikipedia talk pages as transnational public spheres?Susanne Kopf - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):196-211.
    ABSTRACT This paper focuses on the potential societal function of Wikipedia beyond serving as an encyclopedia. That is, it assesses both theoretically and empirically whether talk pages – Wikipedia discussion sites that accompany the encyclopedic entries and provide spaces for debates among Wikipedia editors – may function as transnational public spheres. Despite the increasing number of studies on citizen engagement and participation in the age of social media, Wikipedia as an example of the participatory internet has received little (...)
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  8.  26
    Fine-Grained Analysis: Talk Therapy, Media, and the Microscopic Science of the Face-to-Face.Michael Lempert - 2019 - Isis 110 (1):24-47.
    “Mechanical objectivity,” which Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison trace to the mid-nineteenth century, often coincided with efforts to inscribe nature “directly,” such as through automatic registering machines. But what did this inscription entail? Addressing this question requires that we reexamine indexicalization: the shift in semiotic ideology whereby medial technologies are imagined and acted on as if they preserved material traces of the real. Indexicalization is no simple reflex of mechanical objectivity and is more varied and consequential than commonly imagined. This (...)
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  9.  3
    Political Talk Shows and Prioritization of Political Movement Issues in Iraq.Alia Adel Fakher - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:740-750.
    Political talk shows, in their various forms, are among the most eagerly presented programs by contemporary media outlets, as they are considered one of the most effective means of conveying the media message to the audience. It is well-known that political movement issues have a significant impact on the lives of Iraqi citizens in various aspects—political, economic, social, and cultural, among others. Consequently, these issues have become a priority for media outlets in general and talk (...)
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  10.  21
    Negotiating the boundaries of the politically sayable: populist radical right talk scandals in the German media.Maximilian Grönegräs & Benjamin De Cleen - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (6):665-682.
    Taboos restrict what could but should not be done or said in relation to topics such as bodies and their effluvia, disease, death and killing, or food consumption (Allan & Burridge, 2006, p. 1). In...
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  11.  10
    At the December 2001 media week conference for investors, sponsored by Credit Suisse and staged in the grand ballroom of the Plaza Hotel, Arthur Sulzberger Jr. led the New York Times presentation team. Business was only fair after eight months of recession, but Chairman Sulzberger bantered ligh-tly with then CEO Russ Lewis. Putting on his publisher's hat, an exuberant Sulzberger turned to editorial matters. He bobbed on the balls of his feet at the podium as he talked about his flagship paper's coverage ... [REVIEW]Rick Edmonds - 2010 - In Christopher Meyers (ed.), Journalism ethics: a philosophical approach. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 185.
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  12. The Discourse of Public Participation Media: From Talk Show to Twitter.[author unknown] - 2014
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  13.  25
    Talking Cure: An Essay on the Civilizing Power of Conversation.Paula Marantz Cohen - 2023 - Princeton University Press.
    An invigorating exploration of the pleasures and social benefits of conversation Talking Cure is a timely and enticing excursion into the art of good conversation. Paula Marantz Cohen reveals how conversation connects us in ways that social media never can and explains why simply talking to each other freely and without guile may be the cure to what ails our troubled society. Drawing on her lifelong immersion in literature and culture and her decades of experience as a teacher and (...)
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  14.  19
    An investigation into the argumentation in dialogic media genres: The case of sport talk show interviews.Momene Ghadiri & Mansoor Tavakoli - 2011 - Discourse and Communication 5 (3):273-288.
    This study tried to investigate the type of argumentation found in media discourse data. A case in point was the sport talk show interview. The data included an interview extracted from the Iranian popular sport show, Navad, broadcast every Monday by Channel 3 in Iran. The interview was with the former president of the Football Federation of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Analysis of the data was done within the framework of Toulmin’s conception of argument as a form (...)
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  15.  81
    Bad Copies: How Popular Media Represent Cloning as an Ethical Problem.Patrick D. Hopkins - 1998 - Hastings Center Report 28 (2):6.
    The media, perhaps more than any other slice of culture, influence what we think and talk about, what we take to be important, what we worry about. And this was especially true when news of Dolly hit the airwaves and newstands. Most Americans received training in the ethics of cloning before they knew what cloning was. Media coverage fixed the content and outline of the public moral debate, both revealing and creating the dominant public worries about cloning (...)
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  16.  7
    Authenticating Talk: Building Public Identities in Audience Participation Broadcasting.Joanna Thornborrow - 2001 - Discourse Studies 3 (4):459-479.
    Public participation broadcasting has recently become the focus of attention in media studies, as well as from the social interactional perspectives of discourse and conversation analysis, and it has been argued in particular that the talk show genre has given new and enhanced status to the `authentic' voice of lay members of the public. What remains largely unexplored is how lay participants discursively construct authentic positions for their own knowledgeable participation in such discourse. Expert speakers in public participation (...)
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  17.  18
    Youth talking: notes on social research practices and logics.Duarte Klaudio, Canales Manuel & Cottet Pablo - 2016 - Cinta de Moebio 57:275-284.
    Social research techniques are a set of devices that contribute to the observation and knowledge of the social. Such devices are the subject of analysis in this article. The main argument that we hold is that increasingly innovation in design and use is required to better understand the complexity contained in social processes we studied, not succumbing to the formalization and crystallization of the same, but opening to movements that blur boundaries and open up new possibilities increasingly filled with everyday (...)
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  18.  16
    Tiger talk and candy king: Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages to Swedish children.Helena Sandberg - 2011 - Communications 36 (2):217-244.
    This article describes a policy-driven project Marketing of unhealthy food directed to children, which represents the first extensive study of food and beverage advertising and marketing to children in Sweden. The project mapped out food and beverage advertisements directed to Swedish children to provide policymakers with current data about marketing trends to inform the debate concerning the regulation of food advertising in response to childhood obesity. The nature, number and placement of advertisements on television and in the internet that encourage (...)
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  19.  5
    Book review: Thomas Tufte, Norbert Wildermuth, Anne Sofie Hansen-Skovmoes, Winnie Mitullah (eds), Speaking Up and Talking Back? Media Empowerment and Civic Engagement among East and Southern African Youth. [REVIEW]Janet D. Kwami - 2015 - Discourse and Communication 9 (4):509-512.
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  20. The Information Superhighway, Media Culture, and the Struggle for the Future.Douglas Kellner - unknown
    All the utopian talk of information superhighways and the great media societies of the future helps to mask the fact that contemporary capitalist societies are in a situation of seemingly permanent crisis with increased human suffering due to deteriorating social conditions. In the United States, more than 34 million people live below the poverty level; over 3 million are homeless; over ten million are out of work; and millions lack basic health insurance and guaranteed medical care (Hoffman 1987).
     
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  21.  27
    Small Talk and the Cinema: Conversation, Philosophy and the Case of Sullivan's Travels.Cooper Long - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (1):76-94.
    This article seeks to bring small talk about cinema – the type of conversation that can begin with the question “Have you seen any good movies lately?” – into the analytical ambit of cinema and media studies. In order to do so, I argue that such conversation is relevant to the philosophical project of Stanley Cavell. Throughout his attempts to wed film analysis and philosophical reflection, including his seminal studies of Hollywood genres, Cavell has remained committed to the (...)
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  22.  69
    Media Literacy Education in Art: Motion Expression and the New Vision of Art Education.Kenta Motomura - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (4):58.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.4 (2003) 58-64 [Access article in PDF] Media Literacy Education in Art:Motion Expression and the New Vision of Art EducationThe Bauhaus, which established the foundation of modern design, has greatly influenced Japanese design and art education. It is a historical fact that the movement views "synthetic art" as an integration of the various fields and the integration of the art and machine technology (...)
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  23.  12
    Talking ‘facts’: identity and rationality in industry perspectives on genetic modification.George Cheney, C. Kay Weaver & Alison Henderson - 2007 - Discourse Studies 9 (1):9-41.
    Despite the potential political impact of industry attempts to influence public policy about genetic modification, little research has focused on critical understanding of industry perspectives. This article explores the rhetorical and discursive construction of public messages about this controversial issue by two major New Zealand export industries. The kiwifruit industry advocates a very cautious public policy position, while the dairy industry has been a strong advocate for the commercial development of genetic modification. We demonstrate that these industries draw on multiple (...)
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  24.  46
    Encounter between Hyper-Media and Art Education: A Retrospection of Jean-Jacques Rousseau or Memories of Art and Education.Motoki Nagamori - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (4):41.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.4 (2003) 41-50 [Access article in PDF] Encounter Between Hyper-Media and Art Education:A Retrospection of Jean-Jacques Rousseau or Memories of Art and EducationToday both art and education are experiencing profound change as a result of emerging technologies. This essay attempts to redefine art education by considering the latest media art as the culmination of change in art. Statements about art education are (...)
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  25.  7
    Book review: Joanna Thornborrow, The Discourse of Public Participation Media: From Talk Show to Twitter. [REVIEW]Hongqiang Zhu - 2016 - Discourse Studies 18 (6):766-768.
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  26.  11
    Host power and triadic conversation management in Hong Kong talk radio.Francis Lap Fung Lee & Miao Li - 2013 - Discourse and Communication 7 (2):153-171.
    Past research on talk radio discourses has illustrated the crucial role of the hosts in managing the conversation and shaping the voices of callers. However, past research focused mostly on dyadic host–caller interactions. Radio talk shows in Hong Kong, in contrast, often have more than one host. This study is interested in the implications of the triadic setting of radio talk shows in Hong Kong. It uses Radio Television Hong Kong’s evening program Open Line Open View as (...)
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  27.  27
    Biology as a new media for art: An art research endeavour.Marta de Menezes - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (1-2):115-123.
    Throughout art history, numerous artists have explored connections to science. In the society of today, the relationship between art and biology has been acquiring special visibility. Moreover, the current importance given to science and technology by today’s public opinion directly drives an increased awareness about the relationship between art and science. The public has been eagerly following breakthroughs in scientific research, albeit with mixed feelings: simultaneously awe, hope and fear for its potential misuse. Such awareness about biological sciences and biotechnology (...)
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  28.  41
    The populist body in the age of social media: A comparative study of populist and non-populist representation.Rodolfo E. Colalongo & María Esperanza Casullo - 2022 - Thesis Eleven 173 (1):62-81.
    Populist representation is the process by which a body or set of bodies become the signifier of a powerful act of political transgression of the social order. We call this specific type of representative linkage ‘synecdochal representation’. In it, the leader’s body performs three key functions: it mirrors certain popular traits that are characterized as ‘low’, it displays marks of exceptionality, and it appropriates symbols of institutional power. These tasks are performed through particular ways of acting, dressing, talking, eating, and (...)
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  29.  17
    Researching with Twitter timeline data: A demonstration via “everyday” socio-political talk around welfare provision.Gavin Wood, Kiel Long, Tom Feltwell, Shaun Lawson, John Vines, Julie Barnett & Phillip Brooker - 2018 - Big Data and Society 5 (1).
    Increasingly, social media platforms are understood by researchers to be valuable sites of politically-relevant discussions. However, analyses of social media data are typically undertaken by focusing on ‘snapshots’ of issues using query-keyword search strategies. This paper develops an alternative, less issue-based, mode of analysing Twitter data. It provides a framework for working qualitatively with longitudinally-oriented Twitter data, and uses an empirical case to consider the value and the challenges of doing so. Exploring how Twitter users place “everyday” (...) around the socio-political issue of UK welfare provision, we draw on digital ethnography and narrative analysis techniques to analyse 25 user-timelines and identify three distinctions in users’ practices: users’ engagements with welfare as TV entertainment or as a socio-political concern; the degree of sustained engagement with said issues, and; the degree to which users’ tweeting practices around welfare were congruent with or in contrast to their other tweets. With this analytic orientation, we demonstrate how a longitudinal analysis of user-timelines provides rich resources that facilitate a more nuanced understanding of user engagement in everyday socio-political discussions online. (shrink)
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  30.  41
    Let’s talk about risks. Parental and peer mediation and their relation to adolescents’ perceptions of on- and off-screen risk behavior.Anne Sadza, Esther Rozendaal, Serena Daalmans & Moniek Buijzen - 2024 - Communications 49 (2):175-198.
    Studies of mediation practices typically focus on parental mediation, but during adolescence parents’ impact decreases relative to that of peers. This study compares perceived parental and peer mediation in the context of media portrayals of risk behavior and adolescents’ perceptions thereof. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 278 adolescents aged 12 to 17 (M = 14.18, SD = 1.62, 51.4 % girls) using Hayes’s process macro (model 4) to investigate direct and indirect associations between mediation, media-related cognitions, and (...)
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  31.  44
    Firm–Employee Relationships from a Social Responsibility Perspective: Developments from Communist Thinking to Market Ideology in Romania. A Mass Media Story.Oana Apostol & Salme Näsi - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 119 (3):301-315.
    Firm–employee relationships are dependent on the wider societal context and on the role business plays in society. Changes in institutional arrangements in society affect the perceived responsibilities of firms to their personnel. In this study, we examine mass media discussions about firm–employee relationships from a social responsibility perspective via a longitudinal study in Romanian society. Our analysis indicates how the expected responsibilities of firms towards employees have altered with the changing role of firms in society since the early 1990s. (...)
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  32.  38
    Evaluating the American-Chinese trade war on Chinese social media: discourses of nationalism and rectifying a humiliating past.Gwen Bouvier, Qiang Geng & Wenting Zhao - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    The US and China have both benefited greatly from their trading relationship. However, motivated by a US concern that their partner was becoming more of a rival, then-president Donald Trump began a ‘trade war’ in 2018. In US news outlets and, of particular interest here, on American social media platforms, China was represented as a global menace, with extreme xenophobia against Chinese people. Yet less is known about how Chinese people responded on social media to the same situation. (...)
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  33.  5
    Food mukbang on social media: towards an AI-driven persuasive interventions for living healthy on social media.Grace Ataguba, Iheanyi Kalu, Gerry Chan & Rita Orji - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-22.
    Social media has witnessed different eating practices, including food mukbang. Food mukbang is a type of video presentation where hosts consume large quantities of food while interacting with viewers. This study is situated on the social eating theory, which explains how people connect their individual interests with society. Though this practice has been on social media platforms for a while now, little is known about its health impact on a wide range of audiences. Unhealthy eating practices are associated (...)
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  34.  18
    From texts to contexts: the relevance of digital ethnography in a Foucauldian discourse analysis of online gender talk in Kerala.Daigy Varghese & Shubha Ranganathan - 2022 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 20 (4):516-530.
    Purpose The purpose of this paper is to foreground the importance of context in discourse analysis by drawing on a study of online gender talk on Facebook in India. Design/methodology/approach Using Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA), this study explored participants’ use of language to construct and perform various identities in online gender talk. This study discusses the methods used and challenges in analyzing digital spaces through FDA, focusing specifically on the importance of an ethnographic perspective to contextualize online (...). Findings Engagement with the larger socio-cultural context of the subject of study through various data collection methods enhanced our understanding of the contexts behind text. It helped the authors to explore the data from multiple directions from a Foucauldian framework. This study found that people constructed a “progressive” identity when talking about gender on Facebook. Originality/value There are very few studies combining discourse analysis and digital ethnography and this paper seeks to do that. Digital ethnography helps to look beyond the text and locate text in the larger socio-cultural context. To emphasize the importance of context in discourse analysis, this study engages with both online and offline data as online talk is connected with offline contexts in many significant ways. In this paper, the authors provide a description on various methodological steps used to collect and analyze online data using FDA. (shrink)
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  35.  2
    Paradigm Zoning in the Media Landscape: An Examination of Normative Discourse on Native Advertising.Erin Schauster - 2025 - Journal of Media Ethics 40 (1):43-58.
    The current study examined the normative boundaries of advertising by examining metadiscourse on native advertising. An analysis of 136 Adweek articles uncovered ways in which occupational actors talk about the boundary-spanning practice of native advertising. Metadiscourse represented a willingness and need to experiment within the “new frontier” of technological innovation and that external forces, such as the Federal Trade Commission, are better equipped to enforce the rules. However, norms were contested including those centered on transparency. Lastly, metadiscourse addressed the (...)
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  36. Talking Sense about Political Correctness.Robert Sparrow - 2002 - Journal of Australian Studies 73:119-133.
    In this paper I make a number of points about “political correctness”. Although individually these arguments seem straightforward - and will hopefully be uncontroversial - put together in context they reveal the idea of a “politically correct”, left-wing dominated, media or intelligentsia in Western political culture to be a conservative bogeyman. The rhetoric of “political correctness” is in fact overwhelmingly a right-wing conservative one which itself is used mainly to silence dissenting political viewpoints. However, the same investigation also suggests (...)
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  37.  6
    Persuasion Beyond Belief: Plato and Baudrillard on Rhetoric and Media.Marc Oliver D. Pasco - 2013 - Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy (Philippine e-journal) 14 (1):104-119.
    Is contemporary media society still interested in truth? This paper will try to unravel the vaguely suspicious epistemic relationship between information marketers and information consumers in today's society. There seems to have been forged a feeling of quasi-omniscience within the private and public spheres wherein people, due to the sheer volume of inforntation readily accessible for viewing at any time, become predisposed to exhibit an intriguingly relaxed relationship with knowledge. If the current systems of information seem to trivialize the (...)
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  38. Girl Talk: Understanding Negative Reactions to Female Vocal Fry.Monika Chao & Julia R. S. Bursten - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (1):42-59.
    Vocal fry is a phonation, or voicing, in which an individual drops their voice below its natural register and consequently emits a low, growly, creaky tone of voice. Media outlets have widely acknowledged it as a generational vocal style characteristic of millennial women. Critics of vocal fry often claim that it is an exclusively female vocal pattern, and some say that the voicing is so distracting that they cannot understand what is being said under the phonation. Claiming that a (...)
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  39.  34
    Restrictive policies of the mass media.Lucinda D. Davenport & Ralph S. Izard - 1985 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 1 (1):4 – 9.
    Increasing numbers of news organizations have formal codes of ethics for their personnel. This paper looks at the content of media ethics codes, how these codes are written and what comprises a news organization's fixed value system. Results show that many written policies were devised in recent years, and a noticeable number of other news organizations said they have firmly established unwritten policies. The written codes represented in this survey clearly draw lines around certain activities and label them as (...)
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  40.  88
    Technics, individuation and tertiary memory: Bernard Stiegler's challenge to media theory.Ben Roberts - unknown
    Media studies as a field has traditionally been wary of the question of technology. Discussion of technology has often been restricted to relatively sterile debates about technological determinism. In recent times there has been renewed interest, however, in the technological dimension of media. In part this is doubtless due to rapid changes in media technology, such as the rise of the internet and the digital convergence of media technologies. But there are also an increasing number of (...)
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  41.  31
    Gaze work in political media interviews.Mats Ekström - 2012 - Discourse and Communication 6 (3):249-271.
    This article analyses the orientation of gaze as a significant communicative resource in televised political interviews. The study explores how interviewees use their gaze, in coordination with talk, in receiving and answering adversarial questions. It is guided by conversation analysis, Goffman’s work on gaze in interaction, and the approach on embodied actions developed primarily by Goodwin. Gaze is described as a flexible recipient and speaker resource available for stance-taking, the downgrading and upgrading of actions, and the claiming of the (...)
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  42. Can Social Media Be Seen as a New Public Sphere in the Context of Hannah Arendt's Public Sphere Theory?Metehan Karakurt & Aykut Aykutalp - 2020 - Londra, Birleşik Krallık: IJOPEC Publication Limited.
    With the 21st century, we are witnessing the mass spread of the communication technologies and social media revolution. Interactive networks built on a global scale have led to the formation of a virtual world of reality that is connecting the whole world. With the global spread of communication networks, the question of whether social media points to a new public sphere has been raised. Social media applications such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram are nowadays seen as a (...)
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  43.  23
    The Chattering Mind: A Conceptual History of Everyday Talk.Samuel McCormick - 2020 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    From Plato’s contempt for “the madness of the multitude” to Kant’s lament for “the great unthinking mass,” the history of Western thought is riddled with disdain for ordinary collective life. But it was not until Kierkegaard developed the term chatter that this disdain began to focus on the ordinary communicative practices that sustain this form of human togetherness. The Chattering Mind explores the intellectual tradition inaugurated by Kierkegaard’s work, tracing the conceptual history of everyday talk from his formative account (...)
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  44.  31
    iPod, YouTube, Wii Play: Theological Engagements with Entertainment by D. Brent Laytham, and: If These Walls Could Talk: Community Muralism and the Beauty of Justice by Maureen H. O’Connell.Joel Warden - 2015 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35 (1):199-202.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:iPod, YouTube, Wii Play: Theological Engagements with Entertainment by D. Brent Laytham, and: If These Walls Could Talk: Community Muralism and the Beauty of Justice by Maureen H. O’ConnellJoel WardeniPod, YouTube, Wii Play: Theological Engagements with Entertainment By D. Brent Laytham EUGENE, OR: CASCADE, 2012. 209 PP. $24.00If These Walls Could Talk: Community Muralism and the Beauty of Justice By Maureen H. O’Connell COLLEGEVILLE, MN: LITURGICAL (...)
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  45.  7
    Marketing Communication Management Strategies of Print Media in the Digital Era (An Integrated Marketing Communication Perspective in Maintaining Newspaper Circulation at the Bandung Kexpres Networking Public Daily).Deden Ramdan - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:857-870.
    Along with the times, newspapers have become one of the business commodities that can survive even though they are slowly starting to fall. So, to continue to maintain the life of a print media or newspaper business through consistent newspaper circulation, it is necessary to implement a particular strategy to defend against online media attacks. Focus in this research in general, this research focuses on knowing how the Bandung Express Networking Daily carries out the Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) (...)
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  46.  19
    A Quantitative Approach to (Sub)Registers: The Case of `Sports Announcer Talk'.Jeffrey Reaser - 2003 - Discourse Studies 5 (3):303-321.
    Despite studies such as Biber, quantitative methodologies remain under-exploited resources in discourse analysis. This study employs a quantitative, statistical approach to re-examine and rethink the rather well-explored topic of register. Using the extensively documented register of Sports Announcer Talk as a case study, careful quantitative analysis exposes the limitations of traditional descriptive approaches to registers. Quantitative analysis reveals significant inter-register variation in the distribution of core SAT features in a television broadcast and a radio broadcast of a basketball game. (...)
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  47.  9
    Book review: Michele Zappavigna, Searchable Talk: Hashtags and Social Media Metadiscourse. [REVIEW]Mark McGlashan - 2019 - Discourse and Communication 13 (4):461-464.
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  48.  13
    Questions, Control and the Organization of Talk in Calls to a Radio Phone-In.Joanna Thornborrow - 2001 - Discourse Studies 3 (1):119-143.
    This article examines the management of participation in calls to radio phone-in programmes. In the broadcast media, there are increasing occasions for interaction between `professionals' and lay members of the public, particularly within what have come to be known generically as public participation programmes. People call in to phone-in programmes for various reasons; to give opinions, to get advice, and often to ask questions. In the particular phone-ins analysed here, callers are invited to put questions to leading politicians of (...)
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  49.  11
    Deploying Identity for Democratic Ends on Jan Publiek– A Flemish Television Talk Show.Sonja Spee & Kathleen Dixon - 2003 - European Journal of Women's Studies 10 (4):409-422.
    If public self-expression is a crucial feature of democracy, how might it work on the democratic – or at least, mass – medium par excellence, television? Television talk shows often allow ‘ordinary’ participants the opportunity to express themselves, i.e. deploy identities, feelings and opinions, presumably to further their own ends. This article uses speech act theory and Bakhtinian genre theory to analyze the talk on Jan Publiek, a Flemish talk show. This close reading helps to determine how (...)
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  50.  12
    Voices of political women on women issues in the media: A case of pakistan’s 2013 elections.Bushra H. Rahman & Fakiha Rizvi - 2015 - Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 54 (2):1-10.
    The study examines if women politicians of Pakistan in the media are portrayed as effective decision-makers who demonstrate their leadership abilities and dynamism in advocating women issues. It aims to study whether media was used as an organized effort to use political women to bring social and economic improvement in the status of women by examining the Pakistani media on the issues of women during Pakistan’s 2013 general elections. It explores the assumption put forward by the ‘critical (...)
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