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Affective Publics, Sentiment, Technology and Politics by Zizi Papacharissi, 2015

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Specificaties

Objectstaat
Goed: Een boek dat is gelezen, maar zich in goede staat bevindt. De kaft is zeer minimaal beschadigd ...
ISBN
9780199999743
Publication Name
Affective Publics : Sentiment, Technology, and Politics
Item Length
9.1in
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication Year
2014
Series
Oxford Studies in Digital Politics Ser.
Type
Textbook
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Item Height
0.4in
Author
Zizi Papacharissi
Item Width
6.1in
Item Weight
10.6 Oz
Number of Pages
176 Pages

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Product Information

Over the past few decades, we have witnessed the growth of movements using digital means to connect with broader interest groups and express their points of view. These movements emerge out of distinct contexts and yield different outcomes, but tend to share one thing in common: online and offline solidarity shaped around the public display of emotion. Social media facilitate feelings of engagement, in ways that frequently make people feel re-energized about politics. In doing so, media do not make or break revolutions but they do lend emerging, storytelling publics their own means for feeling their way into events, frequently by making those involved a part of the developing story. Technologies network us but it is our stories that connect us to each other, making us feel close to some and distancing us from others. Affective Publics explores how storytelling practices facilitate engagement among movements tuning into a current issue or event by employing three case studies: Arab Spring movements, various iterations of Occupy, and everyday casual political expressions as traced through the archives of trending topics on Twitter. It traces how affective publics materialize and disband around connective conduits of sentiment every day and find their voice through the soft structures of feeling sustained by societies. Using original quantitative and qualitative data, Affective Publics demonstrates, in this groundbreaking analysis, that it is through these soft structures that affective publics connect, disrupt, and feel their way into everyday politics.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0199999740
ISBN-13
9780199999743
eBay Product ID (ePID)
204070835

Product Key Features

Author
Zizi Papacharissi
Publication Name
Affective Publics : Sentiment, Technology, and Politics
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Year
2014
Series
Oxford Studies in Digital Politics Ser.
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
176 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.1in
Item Height
0.4in
Item Width
6.1in
Item Weight
10.6 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Jf799.5.P37 2014
Reviews
"This book is very rich in its philosophical thinking, which readers interested in political mobilization, civic discourse, and networked publics may find inspiring. It also offers researchers and professionals a foundation for further research and practice via testing the propositions presented."--Yiwei Wang, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly"I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that canin the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew aboutthe Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture"Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --SoniaLivingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement"A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes"If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University"Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia"This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, lInternational Journal of Communication, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." -- Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University "Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia "This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, lInternational Journal of Communication, "This book is very rich in its philosophical thinking, which readers interested in political mobilization, civic discourse, and networked publics may find inspiring. It also offers researchers and professionals a foundation for further research and practice via testing the propositions presented."--Yiwei Wang, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University "Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia "This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, lInternational Journal of Communication, "This book is very rich in its philosophical thinking, which readers interested in political mobilization, civic discourse, and networked publics may find inspiring." --Journal and Mass Communication Quarterly "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University "Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia "This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, lInternational Journal of Communication, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University "Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." --Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes "If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth University"Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia"This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, ^lInternational Journal of Communication, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." -- Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture "Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between those who see social media as effecting political change and those who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement "A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact, opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult Themes, "I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that can in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew about the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement." -- Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture
Table of Content
AcknowledgmentsPrelude1. The Present Affect2. Affective News and Networked Publics3. Affective Demands and the New Political4. The Personal as Political: Everyday Disruptions of the Political Mainstream5. Affective PublicsNotesReferencesIndex
Copyright Date
2014
Topic
Political Process / General, Web / Social Media, General, Political Process / Political Advocacy
Lccn
2014-019484
Dewey Decimal
323/.042
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Computers, Political Science

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