References
Abend, G. (2016). The moral background: An inquiry into the history of business ethics. Princeton University Press.
Abrajano, M., & Hajnal, Z. L. (2017). White backlash: Immigration, race, and American politics. Princeton University Press.
Abts, K., & Rummens, S. (2007). Populism versus democracy. Political Studies, 55(2), 405–424.
Alexander, J. C. (2006). The civil sphere. Oxford University Press.
Alexander, J. C. (2010). The performance of politics: Obama’s victory and the democratic struggle for power. Oxford University Press.
Alexander, J. C. (2018). The societalization of social problems: Church pedophilia, phone hacking, and the financial crisis. American Sociological Review, 83(6), 1049–1078.
Ali, C., & Puppis, M. (2018). When the watchdog neither barks nor bites: Communication as a power resource in media policy and regulation. Communication Theory, 28(3), 270–291.
Ananny, M. (2018). Networked press freedom: Creating infrastructures for a public right to hear. MIT Press.
Apramian, T., Cristancho, S., Watling, C., & Lingard, L. (2017). (Re) Grounding grounded theory: A close reading of theory in four schools. Qualitative Research 17(4), 359–376.
Araujo, A. L.. Reparations for slavery and the slave trade: a transnational and comparative history. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017.
Béland, D. (2019).How ideas and institutions shape the politics of public policy. Cambridge University Press.
Béland, D., & Cox, R. H. (Eds.). (2010). Ideas and politics in social science research. Oxford University Press.
Benkler, Y., Faris, R., & Roberts, H. (2018). Network propaganda: Manipulation, disinformation, and radicalization in American politics. Oxford University Press.
Benjamin, R. (Ed.). (2019). Captivating technology: Race, carceral technoscience, and liberatory imagination in everyday life. Duke University Press.
Berman, S. (2001). Ideas, norms, and culture in political analysis. Comparative Politics, 231–250.
Berry, M. F., Sorensen, T., & Gottheimer, J. (2010). Power in words: The stories behind Barack Obama’s speeches, from the state house to the White House. Beacon Press.
Bhattacharyya, G. (2018). Rethinking racial capitalism: Questions of reproduction and survival. Rowman & Littlefield.
Bidadanure, J. U. (2019). The political theory of universal basic income. Annual Review of Political Science, 22, 481–501.
Bilton, N. (2014). Hatching Twitter: A true story of money, power, friendship, and betrayal. Penguin.
Biondi, M. (2003). The rise of the reparations movement. Radical History Review, 87(1), 5–18.
Bonilla, T., & Grimmer, J. (2013). Elevated threat levels and decreased expectations: How democracy handles terrorist threats. Poetics, 41(6), 650–669.
boyd, d. , & Crawford, K. (2012). Critical questions for big data: Provocations for a cultural, technological, and scholarly phenomenon. Information, Communication & Society, 15(5), 662–679.
Brock, A. (2018). Critical technocultural discourse analysis. New Media & Society, 20(3), 1012–1030.
Brophy, A. L. (2016). When more than property is lost: The dignity losses and restoration of the Tulsa riot of 1921. Law & Social Inquiry, 41(4), 824–832.
Brummett, B. (2018). Techniques of close reading. Sage Publications.
Bucher, T. (2012). Want to be on the top? Algorithmic power and the threat of invisibility on Facebook. New Media & Society, 14(7), 1164–1180.
Cacciatore, M. A., Scheufele, D. A., & Iyengar, S. (2016). The end of framing as we know it … and the future of media effects. Mass Communication and Society, 19(1), 7–23.
Camic, C. & Gross, N. (2001) The new sociology of ideas, in Blau, J. (ed.) The Blackwell Companion to Sociology. Blackwell, pp. 236–249.
Carlson, M. (2016). Metajournalistic discourse and the meanings of journalism: Definitional control, boundary work, and legitimation. Communication Theory, 26(4), 349–368.
Carstensen, M. B., & Schmidt, V. A. (2016). Power through, over and in ideas: Conceptualizing ideational power in discursive institutionalism. Journal of European Public Policy, 23(3), 318–337.
Carter, E. (1960). Cultural history written with lightning: The significance of The Birth of a Nation. American Quarterly, 12(3), 347–357.
Chadwick, A. (2017). The hybrid media system: Politics and power. Oxford University Press.
Chakravartty, P., & Jackson, S. (2020). The disavowal of race in communication theory. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 17(2), 210–219.
Chakravartty, P., Kuo, R., Grubbs, V., & McIlwain, C. (2018). #CommunicationSoWhite. Journal of Communication, 68(2), 254–266.
Chong, D., & Druckman, J. N. (2007). Framing theory. Annual Review of Political Science, 10, 103–126.
Citron, D. K. (2014). Hate crimes in cyberspace. Harvard University Press.
Coates, T. N. (2014). The case for reparations. The Atlantic, 313(5), 54–71.
Cohen, Julie E. (2019). Between truth and power: The legal constructions of informational capitalism. Oxford University Press.
Coleman, E. G. (2012). Coding freedom: The ethics and aesthetics of hacking. Princeton University Press.
Coleman, E. G., & Golub, A. (2008). Hacker practice: Moral genres and the cultural articulation of liberalism. Anthropological Theory, 8(3), 255–277.
Couldry, N. (2010). Why voice matters: Culture and politics after neoliberalism. Sage Publications.
Creech, B., & Nadler, A. M. (2018). Post-industrial fog: Reconsidering innovation in visions of journalism’s future. Journalism, 19(2), 182–199.
Curtis, M. K. (2000). Free speech, the people’s darling privilege: Struggles for freedom of expression in American history. Duke University Press
D’Angelo, Paul. (2002). News framing as a multiparadigmatic research program: A response to Entman. Journal of Communication, 52(4), 870–888.
Darity, W. A. Jr., & Mullen, A. K. (2020). From here to equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the twenty-first century. University of North Carolina Press Books.
Davis, D. B. (1988). The problem of slavery in Western culture. Oxford University Press.
de Vreese, C. H., Esser, F., Aalberg, T., Reinemann, C., & Stanyer, J. (2018). Populism as an expression of political communication content and style: A new perspective. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 23(4), 423–438.
De Wispelaere, J., & Stirton, L. (2004). The many faces of universal basic income. The Political Quarterly, 3, 266–274.
Drezner, D. W. (2017). The ideas industry. Oxford University Press.
Du Bois, W. E. B. (2008). The souls of black folk. Oxford University Press.
Entman, R. M. (2003). Cascading activation: Contesting the White House’s frame after 9/11. Political Communication, 20(4), 415–432.
Entman, R. M. (2004). Projections of power: Framing news, public opinion, and US foreign policy. University of Chicago Press.
Entman, R. M., & Usher, N. (2018). Framing in a fractured democracy: Impacts of digital technology on ideology, power and cascading network activation. Journal of Communication, 68(2), 298–308.
Ernst, N., Esser, F., Blassnig, S., & Engesser, S. (2019). Favorable opportunity structures for populist communication: Comparing different types of politicians and issues in social media, television and the press. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 24(2), 165–188.
Evans Comfort, S. (2020). Journalism as an advocacy tool: Negotiating boundaries of professionalism in the 20th-century American environmental movement. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 97(4), 1080–1100.
Feagin, J. R. (2014). Racist America: Roots, current realities, and future reparations. Routledge.
Finkenbine, R. E. (2007). Belinda’s petition: Reparations for slavery in revolutionary Massachusetts. The William and Mary Quarterly, 64(1), 95–104.
Fiss, O. (2009). The irony of free speech. Harvard University Press.
Fligstein, N., & McAdam, D. (2012). A theory of fields. Oxford University Press.
Florini, S. (2015). The podcast “Chitlin’ Circuit”: Black podcasters, alternative media, and audio enclaves. Journal of Radio & Audio Media, 22(2), 209–219.
Florini, S. (2017). This week in blackness, the George Zimmerman acquittal, and the production of a networked collective identity. New Media & Society, 19(3), 439–454.
Freelon, D., Bossetta, M., Wells, C., Lukito, J., Xia, Y., & Adams, K. (2020). Black trolls matter: Racial and ideological asymmetries in social media disinformation. Social Science Computer Review, 1–19.
Freelon, D., McIlwain, C. D., & Clark, M. (2018). Quantifying the power and consequences of social media protest. New Media & Society, 20(3), 990–1011.
Gaventa, J. (1982). Power and powerlessness: Quiescence and rebellion in an Appalachian valley. University of Illinois Press.
Gofas, A., & Hay, C. (Eds.). (2010). The role of ideas in political analysis: A portrait of contemporary debates. Routledge.
Gillespie, T. (2010). The politics of “platforms.” New Media & Society, 12(3), 347–364.
Gillespie, T. (2018). Custodians of the Internet: Platforms, content moderation, and the hidden decisions that shape social media. Yale University Press.
Goldberg, J. C. (2005). The constitutional status of tort law: Due process and the right to a law for the redress of wrongs. Yale Law Journal, 115, 524.
Gramsci, A. (1971). On the hegemony. In Hoare, Q. and Nowell-Smith, G. (eds.), Selections from the prison notebooks ofAntonio Gramsci. Lawrence and Wishart, pp. 95–123.
Gray, P. W. (2018). “The fire rises”: Identity, the alt-right and intersectionality. Journal of Political Ideologies, 23(2), 141–156.
Günther, E., & Domahidi, E. (2017). What communication scholars write about: An analysis of 80 years of research in high-impact journals. International Journal of Communication, 11, 21.
Gustafson, S. M. (2012). Eloquence is power: Oratory and performance in early America. University of North Carolina Press Books.
Hall, S. (2001). Encoding/decoding. Media and Cultural Studies: Keyworks, 2.
Hall, S. (1996). Race, articulation, and societies structured. Black British Cultural Studies: A Reader, 16.
Hanitzsch, T. (2007). Deconstructing journalism culture: Toward a universal theory. Communication Theory, 17(4), 367–385.
Hanitzsch, T., & Vos, T. P. (2018). Journalism beyond democracy: A new look into journalistic roles in political and everyday life. Journalism, 19(2), 146–164.
Harris-Lacewell, M. V. (2010). Barbershops, bibles, and BET: Everyday talk and black political thought. Princeton University Press.
Hawkins, K. A. (2010). Venezuela’s chavismo and populism in comparative perspective. Cambridge University Press.
Henry, C. P. (2009). Long overdue: The politics of racial reparations. New York University Press.
Herbst, S. (2003). Political authority in a mediated age. Theory and Society, 32(4), 481–503.
Hoynes, H., & Rothstein, J. (2019). Universal basic income in the United States and advanced countries. Annual Review of Economics, 11, 929–958.
Israel, J. I. (2001). Radical enlightenment: Philosophy and the making of modernity, 1650–1750. Oxford University Press.
Iyengar, S., Lelkes, Y., Levendusky, M., Malhotra, N., & Westwood, S. J. (2019). The origins and consequences of affective polarization in the United States. Annual Review of Political Science, 22, 129–146.
Jackson, S. J., Bailey, M., & Welles, B. F. (2020). #HashtagActivism: Networks of race and gender justice. MIT Press.
Jungherr, A., Posegga, O., & An, J. (2019). Discursive power in contemporary media systems: A comparative framework. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 24(4), 404–425.
Kilgo, D. K., Mourao, R. R., & Sylvie, G. (2019). Martin to Brown: How time and platform impact coverage of the Black Lives Matter movement. Journalism Practice, 13(4), 413–430.
King, J. E., & Marangos, J. (2006). Two arguments for basic income: Thomas Paine (1737–1809) and Thomas Spence (1750–1814). In Serra, F. (ed.), History of Economic Ideas. Roma, pp. 55–71.
King, M. L. Jr. ([1967] 2010). Where do we go from here: Chaos or community? (Vol. 2). Beacon Press.
Klonick, K. (2017). The new governors: The people, rules, and processes governing online speech. Harvard Law Review, 131, 1598.
Klonick, K. (2020). The Facebook Oversight Board: Creating an independent institution to adjudicate online free expression. Yale Law Journal, 129, 2418.
Kreiss, D. (2019). The fragmenting of the civil sphere: How partisan identity shapes the moral evaluation of candidates and epistemology. In Alexander, J. C. and Mast, J. L. (eds.), Politics of meaning/Meaning of politics. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 223–241.
Kreiss, D. (2014). A vision of and for the networked world: John Perry Barlow’s Declaration of the Independence of cyberspace at twenty. In Bennett, J. and Strange, N. (eds.), Media independence: Working with freedom or working for free. Routledge, pp. 117–136.
Kreiss, D., Lawrence, R. G., & McGregor, S. C. (2020). Political identity ownership: Symbolic contests to represent members of the public. Social Media+ Society, 6(2).
Kreiss, D. & McGregor, S. (Forthcoming). Owning identity: Struggles to align candidates with voters during the 2020 U.S. Democratic primaries. In Taras, D. and Davis, R. (eds.), The new digital battlefield: Social media and elections in comparative perspective. University of Michigan Press.
Kreiss, D., Meadows, L., & Remensperger, J. (2015). Political performance, boundary spaces, and active spectatorship: Media production at the 2012 Democratic National Convention. Journalism, 16(5), 577–595.
Lazarsfeld, P. F., & Merton, R. K. (1948). Mass communication, popular taste and organized social action. Media Studies, 18–30.
Lebron, C. J. (2017). The making of Black Lives Matter: A brief history of an idea. Oxford University Press.
Lecheler, S., & De Vreese, C. H. (2011). Getting real: The duration of framing effects. Journal of Communication, 61(5), 959–983.
Lecheler, S., Kruikemeier, S., & de Haan, Y. (2019). The use and verification of online sources in the news production process. In Katz, J. E. and Mays, K. K. (eds.), Journalism and truth in an age of social media. Oxford University Press, pp. 167–181.
Lennig, A. (2004). Myth and fact: The reception of The Birth of a Nation. Film History, 117–141.
Levy, S. (2020). Facebook: The inside story. Penguin.
Lieberman, R. C. (2002). Ideas, institutions, and political order: Explaining political change. American Political Science Review, 96(4), 697–712.
Lukes, S. (2004). Power: A radical view. Macmillan International Higher Education.
Maier, D., Waldherr, A., Miltner, P., Wiedemann, G., Niekler, A., Keinert, A., … & Schmid-Petri, H. (2018). Applying LDA topic modeling in communication research: Toward a valid and reliable methodology. Communication Methods and Measures, 12(2–3), 93–118.
Mansell, R. (2012). Imagining the Internet: Communication, innovation, and governance. Oxford University Press.
Matheson, D. (2009). Hans-Georg Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics and journalism research. Journalism Studies, 10(5), 709–718.
McAdam, D., & Kloos, K. (2014). Deeply divided: Racial politics and social movements in post-war America. Oxford University Press.
McCammon, H. J., Muse, C. S., Newman, H. D., & Terrell, T. M. (2007). Movement framing and discursive opportunity structures: The political successes of the US women’s jury movements. American Sociological Review, 72(5), 725–749.
McMillan Cottom, T. (2020). Where platform capitalism and racial capitalism Meet: The sociology of race and racism in the digital society. Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 6(4), 441–449.
Medvetz, T. (2012). Think tanks in America. University of Chicago Press
Mejia, R., Beckermann, K., & Sullivan, C. (2018). White lies: A racial history of the (post) truth. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 15(2), 109–126.
Meltzer, K. (2009). The hierarchy of journalistic cultural authority: Journalists’ perspectives according to news medium. Journalism Practice, 3(1), 59–74.
Mills, C. W. (2017). Black rights/white wrongs: The critique of racial liberalism. Oxford University Press.
Minkkinen, M. (2019). Making the future by using the future: A study on influencing privacy protection rules through anticipatory storylines. New Media & Society, 21(4), 984–1005.
Morstein-Marx, R. (2004). Mass oratory and political power in the late Roman Republic. Cambridge University Press.
Mukherjee, R. (2020). Of experts and tokens: Mapping a critical race archaeology of communication. Communication, Culture and Critique, 13(2), 152–167.
Nelson, L. K. (2017). Computational grounded theory: A methodological framework. Sociological Methods & Research, 49(1), 3–42.
Nicholls, S. B., & Rice, R. E. (2017) A dual-identity model of responses to deviance in online groups: Integrating social identity theory and expectancy violations theory. Communication Theory 27(3), 243–268.
Oliver, M., & Shapiro, T. (2013). Black wealth/white wealth: A new perspective on racial inequality. Routledge.
Painter, N. I. (2010). The history of white people. W. W. Norton & Company.
Parks, G. (2020). Considering the purpose of “an alternative sense-making collective”: A rhetorical analysis of the Intellectual Dark Web. Southern Communication Journal, 1–13.
Patterson, O. (1991). Freedom in the making of Western culture (Vol. 1). IB Tauris.
Perks, L. G., Turner, J. S., & Tollison, A. C. (2019). Podcast uses and gratifications scale development. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 63(4), 617–634.
Phillips, W., & Milner, R. M. (2018). The ambivalent internet: Mischief, oddity, and antagonism online. John Wiley & Sons,.
Reed, I. A. (2011). Interpretation and social knowledge: On the use of theory in the human sciences. University of Chicago Press.
Reed, I. A. (2013). Power: Relational, discursive, and performative dimensions. Sociological Theory, 31, 193–218.
Reese, S. D. (2019). Hierarchy of influences. The International Encyclopedia of Journalism Studies. John Wiley & Sons, 1–5.
Reese, S. D. (2007). The framing project: A bridging model for media research revisited. Journal of Communication, 57(1), 148–154.
Reese, S. D., Jr. Gandy, O. H., & Grant, A. E. (Eds.). (2001) Framing public life: Perspectives on media and our understanding of the social world. Routledge,.
Reese, S. D., & Shoemaker, P. J. (2016). A media sociology for the networked public sphere: The hierarchy of influences model. Mass Communication and Society, 19(4), 389–410.
Roberts, S. T. (2019). Behind the screen: Content moderation in the shadows of social media. Yale University Press.
Robinson, C. J. (2000). Black Marxism: The making of the black radical tradition. University of North Carolina Press.
Schmidt, V. A. (2008). Discursive institutionalism: The explanatory power of ideas and discourse. Annual Review of Political Science, 11, 303–326.
Schmidt, V. A. (2010). Taking ideas and discourse seriously: Explaining change through discursive institutionalism as the fourth “new institutionalism.” European Political Science Review, 2(1), 1–25.
Schroeder, J. (2016). Shifting the metaphor: Examining discursive influences on the Supreme Court’s use of the marketplace metaphor in twenty-first-century free expression cases.Communication Law and Policy, 21(3), 383–430.
Schwab, K. (2017). The fourth industrial revolution. Currency.
Schudson, M. (1989). How culture works. Theory and Society, 18(2), 153–180.
Searle, J. R. & Willis, S. (1995). The construction of social reality. Simon and Schuster.
Sedgwick, E. (1994). The Atlantic Monthly, 1857–1909: Yankee humanism at high tide and ebb. University of Massachusetts Press.
Sewell, W. H. Jr. (2005). Logics of history: Social theory and social transformation. University of Chicago Press.
Sides, J., Tesler, M., & Vavreck, L. (2019). Identity crisis: The 2016 presidential campaign and the battle for the meaning of America. Princeton University Press.
Sinha, M. (2016). The slave’s cause: A history of abolition. Yale University Press.
Smith, R. M. (1993). Beyond Tocqueville, Myrdal, and Hartz: The multiple traditions in America. American Political Science Review, 549–566.
Smith, R. M. (2003). Stories of peoplehood: The politics and morals of political membership. Cambridge University Press.
Smith, R. M. (2020).That is not who we are!: Populism and peoplehood. Yale University Press.
Snow, D. A., Soule, S. A., Kriesi, H., & McCammon, H. J. (Eds.). (2018). The Wiley-Blackwell companion to social movements. Wiley-Blackwell.
Sobieraj, S. (2020). Credible threat: Attacks against women online and the future of democracy. Oxford University Press.
Spinelli, M., & Dann, L. (2019). Podcasting: The Audio Media Revolution. Bloomsbury Publishing.
Standing, G. (2017). Basic income: And how we can make it happen. Penguin.
Stengers, I. (2011). Thinking with Whitehead: A free and wild creation of concepts. Harvard University Press.
Stokes, M. (2007). DW Griffith’s the Birth of a Nation: A history of the most controversial motion picture of all time. Oxford University Press.
Stone, D. A. (1989). Causal stories and the formation of policy agendas. Political Science Quarterly, 104(2), 281–300.
Torpey, J. (2006). Making whole what has been smashed: On reparations politics. Harvard University Press.
Turner, F. (2006). From counterculture to cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the rise of digital utopianism. University of Chicago Press.
Tversky, A., & Kahneman, D. (1989). Rational choice and the framing of decisions. In Karpak, B. and Zionts, S. (eds.). Multiple criteria decision making and risk analysis using microcomputers. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 81–126.
Unkel, J., & Haim, M. (2019). Googling politics: Parties, sources, and issue ownerships on Google in the 2017 German federal election campaign. Social Science Computer Review, 1-18.
Van Dijck, J., Poell, T., & De Waal, M. (2018). The platform society: Public values in a connective world. Oxford University Press.
Van Parijs, P. (2013). The universal basic income: Why utopian thinking matters, and how sociologists can contribute to it. Politics & Society, 41(2), 171–182.
Van Parijs, P., & Vanderborght, Y. (2017). Basic income: A radical proposal for a free society and a sane economy. Harvard University Press.
Verdun, V. (1992). If the shoe fits, wear it: An analysis of reparations to African Americans. Tulane Law Review, 67, 597.
Vrikki, P., & Malik, S. (2019). Voicing lived-experience and anti-racism: Podcasting as a space at the margins for subaltern counterpublics. Popular Communication, 17(4), 273–287.
Westley, R. (1998). Many billions gone: Is it time to reconsider the case for Black reparations. BC Third World Law Journal, 19, 429.
White, K. C. (2018). The branding of right-wing activism: The news media and the Tea Party. Oxford University Press.
Whitehead, A. N. ([1933] 1942). Adventures of ideas. CUP Archive.
Whyte, C. E. (2016). Thinking inside the (black) box: Agenda setting, information seeking, and the marketplace of ideas in the 2012 presidential election. New Media & Society, 18(8), 1680–1697.
Wirth, W., Esser, F., Wettstein, M., Engesser, S., Wirz, D., Schulz, A., & Steenbergen, M. R. (2016). The appeal of populist ideas, strategies, and styles: A theoretical model and research design for analyzing populist political communication. NCCR Democracy Working Paper Series (88).
Yang, A. (2018). The war on normal [eople: The truth about America’s disappearing jobs and why universal basic income is our future. Hachette.