Title: Govt' 330: Mass Media Politics
1Govt. 330 Mass Media Politics
2Chapter 1 The American Political Information
System.
- Gatekeeping Who and What Makes the News?
- News as A Democratic Information System
- Politicians, Press, and the People.
- A Definition of News.
- The New Gatekeeping
- How Mediated Government Works.
- Case Study Governing with the News Terror
Comes to America.
3Chapter 1 (continued)
- The Fragile Link Between News and Democracy.
- Why Free Speech Cannot Guarantee Good Information
- Soft News and the Turn Away from Politics.
- Myths About News Bias.
- What Kind of News Would Better Serve Democracy?
4Chapter 2 Four Information Biases that Matter.
- Personalization.
- Dramatization.
- Fragmentation.
- The Authority-Disorder Bias.
- How Do Competing Journalists Write Such Similar
Stories? - Case Study How George W. Bush Got His Swagger.
- The Need for Reform
5Chapter 3. The Political Economy of News.
- Corporate Profit Logic and News Content.
- Case Study All the News that Fits (the Audience
Demographics). - The Political Economy of News.
- Economics vs Democracy The Business of News.
- The Media Monopoly Arguments for and Against
- The Media Monopoly Five Information Trends.
- The Telecommunications Act of 1996.
6Chapter 3 (continued)
- How Does Corporate Influence Operate?
- News on the Internet Perfecting the
Commercialization of Information? - Commercialized Information and Citizen
Confidence. - Megatrends Technology, Economics, and Social
Change. - Personalized Information and the Future of
Democracy. - Whither the Public Sphere?
7Chapter 4. How Politicians Make the News.
- The Politics of Illusion.
- The Sources of Political News.
- Case Study Selling the Iraqi War.
- News Images as Symbolic Political Reality.
- News Bias and Press-Government Relations.
- The Goals of Strategic Political Communication.
8Chapter 4 (Continued)
- Symbolic Politics and the Techniques of Image
Making. - News Management From Staged Events to Damage
Control. - News Management Styles and the Presidency.
- Different Presidents, Different Management Styles
- Press Relations Feeding the Beast.
- Government and the Politics of News Making.
9Chapter 5. How Journalists Report the News.
- Work Routines and Professional Norms.
- When Routines Produce Quality Reporting.
- How Reporting Practices Contribute to News Bias.
- Reporters and Officials Cooperation and Control.
- The Insider Syndrome.
- Reporters as Members of News Organizations
Pressures to Standardize.
10Chapter 5 (continued)
- Reporters as a Pack Pressures to Agree.
- Feeding Frenzy When Packs Attack.
- The Paradox of Organizational Routines.
- When Journalism Works.
- Democracy With or Without Citizens?
11Chapter 6. Inside the Profession Objectivity and
Other Double Standards
- Journalists and their Professions.
- The Paradox of Objective Reporting.
- Defining Objectivity Fairness, Balance, and
Truth. - The Origins of Professional Journalism Standards.
- Case Study The Curious Origins of Objective
Journalism. - Professional Practices and News Distortion.
- The Adversarial Role of the Press.
12Chapter 6 (continued)
- Standards of Decency and Good Taste.
- Documentary Reporting Practices.
- The Use of Stories as Standardized News Formats.
- Reporters as Generalists.
- The Practice of Editorial Review.
- Objectivity Reconsidered.
13Chapter 7. The News Public Information
Processing and Public Opinion.
- News, Citizen Information, and Public Opinion.
- The Citizen's Dilemma Who and What to Believe.
- Internet vs. Mass Media Why Mass News Still
Matters . - Processing the News.
- Why People Prefer TV Audio and Visual
Information.
14Chapter 7 (continued)
- News Frames and Political Learning.
- Case Study National Attention Deficit Disorder?
- News and Personal Experience What Gets Through.
- Uses and Gratifications Other Reasons People
Follow the News. - The Future Citizens, Information, and Politics.
15Chapter 8. All the News that Fits Democracy
Solutions for Citizens, Politicians, and
Journalists.
- The News About the Private Media System.
- The News About Public Broadcasting.
- The News About Objective Journalism.
- News and Power in America Ideal versus Reality.
- Why the Myth of a Free Press Persists.
16Chapter 8 (continued)
- Proposals for Citizens, Journalists, and
Politicians. - Case Study Citizen Input from Interactive News
to Desktop Democracy. - The Perils of Virtual Democracy.
- Corporate Social Responsibility A Place to
Start. - General Conclusion