How Canadians Communicate IV

Media and Politics

Livre numérique

Substantial changes have occurred in the nature of political discourse over the past thirty years. Once, traditional media dominated the political landscape, but in recent years Facebook, Twitter, blogs and Blackberrys have emerged as important tools and platforms for political campaigns. While the Canadian party system has proved surprisingly resilient, the rhythms of political life are now very different. A never-ending 24-hour news cycle has resulted in a never-ending political campaign. The implications of this new political style and its impact on political discourse are issues vigorously debated in this new volume of How Canadians Communicate, as is the question on every politician’s mind: How can we draw a generation of digital natives into the current political dialogue? With contributions from such diverse figures as Elly Alboim, Richard Davis, Tom Flanagan, David Marshall, and Roger Epp, How Canadians Communicate IV is the most comprehensive review of political communication in Canada in over three decades – one that poses questions fundamental to the quality of public life.

Table des matières

Table des matières
Cover 1
Contents 6
List of Illustrations 8
Acknowledgements 10
The Past and Future of Political Communication in Canada: An Introduction 12
PART I: THE CHANGING WORLD OF MEDIA AND POLITICS 38
1 The Uncertain Future of the News 40
2 On the Verge of Total Dysfunction: Government, Media, and Communications 56
3 Blogs and Politics 66
4 The 2011 Federal Election and the Transformation of Canadian Media and Politics 82
5 Berry’d Alive: The Media, Technology, and the Death of Political Coverage 120
6 Political Communication and the “Permanent Campaign” 140
7 Are Negative Ads Positive? Political Advertising and the Permanent Campaign 160
8 E-ttack Politics: Negativity, the Internet, and Canadian Political Parties 180
9 Myths Communicated by Two Alberta Dynasties 200
10 Throwing the Baby Out with the Bathwater: Canadian Forces News Media Relations and Operational Security 224
PART II: CITIZENS AND POLITICS IN EVERYDAY LIFE 242
11 Exceptional Canadians: Biography in the Public Sphere 244
12 Off-Road Democracy: The Politics of Land, Water, and Community in Alberta 270
13 Two Solitudes, Two Québecs, and the Cinema In-Between 292
14 Verbal Smackdown: Charles Adler and Canadian Talk Radio 306
15 Contemporary Canadian Aboriginal Art: Storyworking in the Public Sphere 328
16 Intimate Strangers: The Formal Distance Between Music and Politics in Canada 360
Final Thoughts: How Will Canadians Communicate About Politics and the Media in 2015? 380
Contributors 390
B 394
A 394
Index 394
C 395
D 396
E 396
F 396
G 396
H 396
I 397
J 397
L 397
K 397
M 398
N 398
O 399
P 399
Q 400
R 400
S 400
T 401
U 401
V 401
W 401
Y 401

Compléments