tailieunhanh - A Theory of Media Politics
Tham khảo sách 'a theory of media politics', văn hoá - nghệ thuật, báo chí - truyền thông phục vụ nhu cầu học tập, nghiên cứu và làm việc hiệu quả | A Theory of Media Politics How the Interests of Politicians Journalists and Citizens Shape the News By John Zaller Draft October 24 1999 Under contract to University of Chicago Press A version of the book was given as the inaugural Miller-Converse Lecture University of Michigan April 14 1997. Versions have also been given at the Annenberg School for Communication at Penn and at the University of British Columbia and at seminars at UCLA UCLA School of Law UC Riverside Harvard Princeton UCLA Program in Communication Studies and Chicago. What audiences at these places have liked and disliked has been immensely valuable to me in developing my argument though perhaps not always in the ways they might have expected. I am also grateful to Michael Alvarez Kathy Bawn Bill Bianco Lara Brown Jim DeNardo John Geer Shanto Iyengar Taeku Lee Dan Lowenstein Jonathan Nagel John Petrocik Tom Schwartz Jim Sidanius Warren Miller and especially to Larry Bartels Barbara Geddes and George Tsebelis for helpful comments on earlier drafts. Chapter 1 The New Game in Town Introduction A few years after he left office in 1969 President Lyndon Johnson was asked by a TV news producer what had changed in American politics since the 1930s when he came to Washington as a young Texas congressman. You guys Johnson replied without even reflecting. All you guys in the media. All of politics has changed because of you. You ve broken all the party machines and the ties between us in the Congress and the city machines. You ve given us a new kind of people. A certain disdain passed over his face. Teddy They re your creations your puppets. No machine could ever create a Teddy Kennedy. Only you guys. They re all yours. Your product. Halberstam 1979 pp. 15-16 In the old days political disagreements were settled in backroom deals among party big shots. As majority leader of the Senate in the 1950s Johnson achieved national fame as master of this brand of insider politics. But in the new environment .
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