International Journal of Communication
Publishes a Special Section on
Growing Economic Inequality and Mediated Communication

The International Journal of Communication announces the publication of a Special Section focused on “Growing Economic Inequality and Mediated Communication” guest-edited by Paschal Preston and Andrea Grisold.

Sharp rises in economic inequalities have been one of the most significant developments in the heartlands of the capitalist system since the 1970s. Widening income gaps, increasingly uneven distribution of wealth and falling wage ratios comprise key aspects and indicators of this transformation. But many analysts also view the rise of populist nationalism and decline in the public’s trust in established political parties, media and other institutions as closely linked to the polarized distribution of income and other material resources.

After decades of benign neglect, the issues of economic and social inequalities have re-entered the stage of mainstream political attention in the core western countries over the past couple of years. This is due, in part, to the prominent public profile and popularity of books by Thomas Piketty and Tony Atkinson who have worked on this topic for many years.  Moreover, the renewed attention to economic and social inequality unfolds against a background of very slow, partial and highly uneven “recovery” from the major financial crash in the north-Atlantic region in 2007‒2008. Sluggish economic growth, declining or stagnant incomes, state policy regimes oriented toward austerity have followed in many countries and extreme turbulence in the formal political arena.

This special themed section of IJoC engages with two broad, if overlapping, sets of questions:

How do the new forms of economic inequality, power and privilege relate to relevant theories of the news media and prevailing conceptualizations of the role of the institutions of public communication? How does this knowledge base serve to help forward-looking analyses of the meaning and implications of recent trends in economic inequalities?

What role do the new forms of economic inequality, thus power and privilege, play in the typical narratives of mediated communication today? How does the “story-telling” take place? How is inequality framed and discussed?

The seven papers in this themed section are transdisciplinary in scope, bringing together several leading researchers, based in the communication studies, journalism and the political economy fields―all engaged in complementary ways in exploring the relations between media and public communication institutions on the one hand, and significant economic inequality trends and related developments on the other.

We invite you to read these articles that published on October 25, 2017 in the International Journal of Communication.  Please Ctrl+Click on the article titles below for direct links to the papers of interest.

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Economic Inequalities and Mediated Communication―An Introduction
Paschal Preston, Dublin City University, Andrea Grisold, Vienna University of Economics and Business

How Come We Know? The Media Coverage of Economic Inequality
Andrea Grisold, Hendrik Theine, Vienna University of Economics and Business

The Mediation of Hope: Communication Technologies and Inequality in Perspective
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics

Citizen Detriment: Communications, Inequality and Social Order
Peter Golding, Northumbria University

Contrasting Conceptions, Discourses and Studies of Economic Inequalities
Paschal Preston, Dublin City University, Henry Silke, University of Limerick

Favoring the Elites: Think Tanks and Discourse Coalitions
Núria Almiron, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain 

Economic Inequality in German Quality Press: Framing Concerns About Inequality and Redistribution
Julian Bank, University of Duisburg-Essen

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Larry Gross
Editor                                                  

Arlene Luck
Managing Editor

Paschal Preston, Andrea Grisold
Guest Editors

International Journal of Communication 
Publishes a Special Section on
Mediatized Populisms: InterAsian Lineages

In the aftermath of electoral victories by populist political leaders around the world, we see a new genre of scholarship on global mediatized populism, a Zeitgeist or world spirit of our times whose rise has been enabled by and through media, gaining considerable public traction. In contrast to both European and Latin American contexts which were the focus of earlier studies of media and populism, the mass-mediated spectacle of popular politics is a relatively new phenomenon across much of Asia and the Middle East. Across the InterAsian region, only since the last decade of the 20th century have government-monopolized propagandist architectures of television been replaced by commercial news channels. In the intervening years, media—both old and new—have become privileged domains of politics for the first time.

What difference does the relatively late arrival of mediatized politics across Asia make to the logic of populism?

Do media-enabled projects of people-making unfold differently in countries where states have more direct control over the media, versus those where commercial media enjoy free rein?

The essays in this Special Section disaggregate the idea of a singular media logic of populist politics and examine instead the institutional and political-economic dynamics of mediatization, and the variegated structures of media fields, in which contemporary forms of populist politics are embedded.

Relocating the study of populism does not simply fill a knowledge-gap by adding new regionally articulated examples of populisms. Instead, we approach the politics of populism from InterAsia in order to move beyond the presentist discussions on the “age of Trump.” By shifting focus away from the exceptional figure of the angry populist voter to the antecedents, afterlives, and grounds of the populist everyday, this collection of essays draws attention to the historical lineages and political-institutional contexts of mediatized politics as enabling conditions for the contemporary rise of populism.

We invite you to read these articles published in the International Journal of Communication on October 23, 2017.  Please Ctrl+Click on the article titles below for direct linking to the papers of interest.
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Mediatized Populisms: InterAsian Lineages – Introduction
Paula Chakravartty, Srirupa Roy

Digital Populism: Trolls and Political Polarization of Twitter in Turkey
Ergin Bulut, Erdem Yörük

Exuberant Politics on the Internet: Two Forms of Populism in South Korea’s 2008 Beef Protests
Jiyeon Kang

New Media, New Partisanship: Divided Virtual Politics In and Beyond Thailand
Duncan McCargo

Fragile Hegemony: Social Media and Competitive Electoral Populism in India
Subir Sinha

Broadcasting the Dharna: Mediating “Contained” Populism in Contemporary Pakistan
Ayesha Mulla

Innuendo as Outreach: @narendramodi and the Use of Political Irony on Twitter
Joyojeet Pal, Priyank Chandra, Padma Chirumamilla, Vaishnav Kameswaran, Andre Gonawela, Pritika Dasgupta

Conspiratorial Webs: Media Ecology and Parallel Realities in Turkey
Rolien Hoyng, Murat Es

Disagreement Without Dissensus: The Contradictions of Hizbollah’s Mediated Populism
Hatim El-Hibri

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

Larry Gross
Editor 

Arlene Luck 
Managing Editor

Paula Chakravartty & Srirupa Roy
Guest Editors

Announcements header

The International Journal of Communication invites you to read these papers that published in September

The International Journal of Communication has published 30 papers in September 2017 including the Special Section on Global Digital Culture. We invite you to read these papers which can be accessed at ijoc.org, or Ctrl+Click on the article title below. We look forward to your feedback!

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ARTICLES

Civic Creativity: Role-Playing Games in Deliberative Process
Eric Gordon, Jason Haas, Becky Michelson

Integration or Isolation? Mapping Out the Position of Radical Right Media in the Public Sphere
Ov Cristian Norocel, Gabriella Szabó, Márton Bene

Emotional Realism, Affective Labor and Politics in the Arab Fandom of Game of Thrones
Katty Alhayek

Revisiting the Origins of Communication Research: Walter Lippmann’s WWII Adventure in Propaganda and Psychological Warfare
Dominique Trudel

To Speak or Not to Speak: Predicting College Students’ Outspokenness in the Pro-Democracy Movement in Hong Kong
Wan-Ying Lin, Bolin Cao, Xinzhi Zhang

Thucydides’ Trap and Online Readers’ Reviews of Two Books on Zheng He’s Voyages
Dexin Tian, Chin-Chung Chao

Rhizomatic Writings on the Wall: Graffiti and Street Art in Cochabamba, Bolivia, as Nomadic Visual Politics
Lucia Mulherin Palmer

The Musicless Music Video as a Spreadable Meme Video: Format, User Interaction, and Meaning on YouTube
Cande Sánchez-Olmos, Eduardo Viñuela

Arabism and Anti-Persian Sentiments on Participatory Web Platforms: A Social Media Critical Discourse Study
Majid KhosraviNik, Nadia Sarkhoh 

Radio Mentions: An Analysis of Radio Personalities and Ethical Behaviour (Spain)
Salvador Perelló-Oliver, Clara Muela-Molina

Message-Framing Effects on Indian Females’ Mammography-Screening Intentions: Examining Moderating and Mediating Relationships
Christopher McKinley, Yam Limbu, C. Jayachandran

What Is News? What Is the Newspaper? The Physical, Functional, and Stylistic Transformation of Print Newspapers, 1988–2013
Miki Tanikawa

Reporting War in 140 Characters: How Journalists Used Twitter During the 2014 Gaza–Israel Conflict
Ori Tenenboim

Environmental Groups Treading the Discursive Tightrope of Social License: Australian and Canadian Cases Compared
Lyn McGaurr, Libby Lester

A “Crisscrossing” Historical Analysis of Four Theories of the Press
Terhi Rantanen

BOOK REVIEWS

What is Happening in Digital Education? The Class and The War on Learning
Grace Yuehan Wang

Robert W. McChesney, Blowing the Roof Off the Twenty-First Century: Media, Politics, and the Struggle for Post-Capitalist Democracy
Aleah Kiley 

Susan Jeffords and Fahed Al-Sumait (Eds.), Covering Bin Laden: Global Media and the World’s Most Wanted Man
Oliver Boyd-Barrett  

Xigen Li, Emerging Media: Uses and Dynamics
Ki Joon Kim

Miguel A. Jiménez-Crespo, Crowdsourcing and Online Collaborative Translations: Expanding the Limits of Translation Studies
Linxin Liang, Mingwu Xu

Nicholas A. John, The Age of Sharing
Robert W. Gehl

Tim Wu, The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside our Heads
Jonathan D. Aronson

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Larry Gross                                              
Editor                                                          

Arlene Luck
Managing Editor

International Journal of Communication 
Publishes a Special Section on Global Digital Culture

Is There a Global Digital Culture?

Contributors debate this question in this Special Issue co-published with CARGC Press. Authors initially presented this research at the second Biennial Symposium of the Center for Advanced Research in Global Communication (CARGC) at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania in April 2016.

In the 1980s and 1990s, the question “Is there a global culture?” fueled heated debates as intellectual opponents grappled with the social, political, economic and cultural consequences of globalization. Guest-edited by Marwan M. Kraidy, this Special Section by global communication scholars revisits the discussion on global culture in light of the digital revolution. The articles that follow do not pretend to provide a comprehensive answer to the existence or lack thereof of a global digital culture. Rather, they consider this question as an intellectual provocation to revisit how the universal relates to the particular, the global to the local, the digital to the material. Questions guiding these articles include:

How do networks transmute individual autonomy and the sovereignty of the body?  How is digital culture fomenting disjuncture across the globe in dissident, marginal, or rogue formations?

To what extent have boundaries between public and private, visible and invisible, shifted in the digital era?

How is the digital affecting the ways people work and play, how they experience and judge beauty, and how they protest?

Most fundamentally, does digitization herald a new chapter in how we understand ourselves?

We invite you to read these articles that published in the International Journal of Communication on September 30, 2017.  Please Ctrl+Click on the article titles below for direct linking to the papers of interest.

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Convergence and Disjuncture in Global Digital Culture ― An Introduction
Marwan M. Kraidy, University of Pennsylvania

The Cultures of Anonymity and Violence in the Mexican Blogosphere
Hector Amaya, University of Virginia

Uploading the News After Coming Down From the Mountain: The FARC’s Experiment with Online Television in Cuba, 2012–2016
Alexander L. Fattal, Pennsylvania State University

Video Games and the Asymmetry of Global Cultural Flows: The Game Industry and Game Culture in Iran and the Czech Republic
Vit Šisler, Jaroslav Švelch, Josef Šlerka, Charles University

Digital Platform as a Double-Edged Sword: How to Interpret Cultural Flows in the Platform Era
Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser University

Poor Images, Ad-Hoc Archives, Artists’ Rights: The Scrappy Beauties of Handmade Digital Culture
Laura U. Marks, Simon Fraser University

The Lurker and the Politics of Knowledge in Data Culture
Olga Goriunova, Royal Holloway University of London

Digital Labor Studies Go Global: Toward a Digital Decolonial Turn
Antonio Casilli, Telecom Paris-Tech
__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Larry Gross
Editor

 Arlene Luck
 
Managing Editor

 Marwan M. Kraidy
Guest Editor 

Announcements header

The International Journal of Communication has published 17 papers in August 2017. To access these papers, please Ctrl+Click on the article titles below or go to ijoc.org.

ARTICLES

Social Media as a Platform for Incessant Political Communication: A Case Study of Modi’s “Clean India” Campaign
Usha M. Rodrigues, Michael Niemann

The Importance of Cultural Proximity in the Success of Turkish Dramas in Qatar
Miriam Berg 

Race and Police Brutality: The Importance of Media Framing
Kim Fridkin, Amanda Wintersieck, Jillian Courey, Joshua Thompson

Do Arabs Really Read Less? “Cultural Tools” and “More Knowledgeable Others” as Determinants of Book Reliance in Six Arab Countries
Justin D. Martin, Ralph J. Martins, Shageaa Naqvi

Resounding News: The Acoustic Conventions of Israeli Newscasts
Hadar Levy, Amit Pinchevski

Are Half of Latin Americans Not Online? A Four-Country Study of Reasons for Internet Non-Adoption
Hernan Galperin

The Defining Approaches and Practical Paradox of Sensitive Data: An Investigation of Data Protection Laws in 92 Countries and Regions and 200 Data Breaches in the World
Min Wang, Zuosu Jiang

Effects of Message Repetition and Negativity on Credibility Judgments and Political Attitudes
Nicole Ernst, Rinaldo Kühne, Werner Wirth

Who’s Bad? Attitudes Toward Resettlers From the Post-Soviet South Versus Other Nations in the Russian Blogosphere
Svetlana S. Bodrunova, Olessia Koltsova, Sergey Koltcov, Sergey Nikolenko  

“We Are All Fighters”: The Transmedia Marketing of Difference in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC)
Jennifer McClearen

The Cultural Cold War Goes “Vulgar”: Radio Serial Melodrama in Post–Korean War South Korea, 1956–1960
Bohyeong Kim

 Personal and Public Levels of Political Incivility
Ashley Muddiman

A Noneventful Social Movement: The Occupy Wall Street Movement’s Struggle Over Privately Owned Public Space
Hao Cao

Access to Rabat: De Jure Policies and De Facto Realities in Moroccan Newspaper Coverage of the February 20 Movement and Constitutional Reforms, 2011–2012
Bradley C. Freeman

“I Don’t Care About Politics, I Just Like That Guy!” Affective Disposition and Political Attributes in Information Processing of Political Talk Shows
Carina Weinmann, Franziska S. Roth, Frank M. Schneider, Tanja Krämer, Frederic R. Hopp, Melanie J. Bindl, Peter Vorderer

How Political Conflict Shapes Online Spaces: A Comparison of Climate Change Hyperlink Networks in the United States and Germany
Thomas Häussler, Silke Adam, Hannah Schmid-Petri, Ueli Reber

Credibility Gaps and Public Opinion in a Competitive Media Environment: The Case of Arab Satellite TV News in Lebanon
Erik C. Nisbet, Magdalena Saldana, Thomas Johnson, Guy Golan, Anita Day

FEATURES

What’s the Difference With “Difference”? Equity, Communication, and the Politics of Difference
Ralina L. Joseph

 

Thank you for your continuing interest in the work that IJoC publishes. We look forward to your comments!

Larry Gross                                                   
Editor

Arlene Luck
Managing Editor