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Tweeting to Power
The Social Media Revolution in American Politics
von Jason Gainous, Kevin M. Wagner
Verlag: Oxford University Press
E-Book / PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


Speicherplatz: 5 MB
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ISBN: 978-0-19-996508-3
Erschienen am 29.11.2013
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 224 Seiten

Preis: 36,99 €

Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Jason Gainous is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Louisville. Kevin M. Wagner is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Florida Atlantic University.



Chapter 1: Social Media - The New Dinner Table?
Chapter 2: Evolution or Revolution - Why Facebook and Twitter Matter?
Chapter 3: Congress 2.0 - Internet-Style Politics
Chapter 4: Congress 2.0 - Who's Tweeting?
Chapter 5: Public Opinion 2.0 - Read My Feed
Chapter 6: Public Opinion 2.0 - The New Social Capital
Chapter 7: Congress 2.0 - Controlling the Flow of Information
Chapter 8: Public Opinion 2.0 - The Direct Conduit
Chapter 9: Congress 2.0 - Tweeting for Support
Chapter 10: Social Media Tomorrow - Tweeting the Future?
Appendix
Notes
References
Index



Online social media are changing the face of politics in the United States. Beginning with a strong theoretical foundation grounded in political, communications and psychology literature, Tweeting to Power examines the effect of online social media on how people come to learn, understand and engage in politics. Gainous and Wagner propose that platforms such as Facebook and Twitter offer the opportunity for a new information flow that is no longer being structured and limited by the popular media. Television and newspapers, which were traditionally the sole or primary gatekeeper, can no longer limit or govern what information is exchanged. By lowering the cost of both supplying the information and obtaining it, social networking applications have recreated how, when and where people are informed.
To establish this premise, Gainous and Wagner analyze multiple datasets, quantitative and qualitative, exploring and measuring the use of social media by voters and citizens as well as the strategies and approaches adopted by politicians and elected officials. They illustrate how these new and growing online communities are new forums for the exchange of information that is governed by relationships formed and maintained outside traditional media. Using empirical measures, they prove both how candidates utilize Twitter to shape the information voters rely upon and how effective this effort was at garnering votes in the 2010 congressional elections. With both theory and data, Gainous and Wagner show how the social media revolution is creating a new paradigm for political communication and shifting the very foundation of the political process.


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