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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      05 June 2014
      31 October 2013
      ISBN:
      9781107300767
      9781107041776
      9781107614574
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.55kg, 261 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.43kg, 261 Pages
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    Book description

    We live in a revolutionary age of communicative abundance in which many media innovations - from satellite broadcasting to smart glasses and electronic books - spawn great fascination mixed with excitement. In the field of politics, hopeful talk of digital democracy, cybercitizens and e-government has been flourishing. This book admits the many thrilling ways that communicative abundance is fundamentally altering the contours of our lives and of our politics, often for the better. But it asks whether too little attention has been paid to the troubling counter-trends, the decadent media developments that encourage public silence and concentrations of unlimited power, so weakening the spirit and substance of democracy. Exploring examples of clever government surveillance, market censorship, spin tactics and back-channel public relations, John Keane seeks to understand and explain these trends, and how best to deal with them. Tackling some tough but big and fateful questions, Keane argues that 'media decadence' is deeply harmful for public life.

    Reviews

    ‘With impressive intellectual breadth and rich analytic insight, John Keane’s engaging new book moves us beyond conventional ways of thinking about media and democracy. Addressing key debates, his writing is, as always, accessible, compelling, and edifying.’

    Peter Dahlgren - Lund University

    ‘Vanquishing received wisdom and resisting cliché, John Keane charts the transformative impact of communicative abundance. Invoking McCluhan, Derrida, Curran and others, he perceptively constructs a significant vision: an emerging 'monitory democracy' dependent on new roles for media and very new relationships between media institutions, technology and society.’

    Monroe E. Price - Director, Center for Global Communications Studies, University of Pennsylvania, and Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

    ‘John Keane doesn’t answer all your questions about the new media and democracy - but he makes it impossible for you to credit those who pretend to. In energetic, sometimes gripping, prose he offers indispensable conceptual tools (particularly 'monitory democracy') for a fresh look at where democracy stands in an age of communicative abundance teetering on the edge of communicative decay. A brilliant work!’

    Michael Schudson - Columbia Journalism School

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    Contents

    • 1 - Communicative abundance
      pp 1-76

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