Synopses & Reviews
The constraints of news production and the consequent limitations of news result directly in dissatisfaction throughout news audiences. News stories are frequently found to be inadequately informative to the extent that journalism is more inclined to generate political disenchantment, rather than prompt its audiences to pursue a fully engaged level of political participation in their societies. Journalism and Political Exclusion provides a multi-method, integrated analysis of news production and news audiences, including a long-term study of community activists in a central Canadian city. During the seven-year fieldwork period, different groups of research participants completed questionnaires, wrote news diaries, and were interviewed in their homes while viewing network television newscasts. Clarke shows that frustrations with the informational limitations of television and other news media are accelerated among women and the working-class often lack opportunities to access alternative information sources. The critical contribution of journalism to the production and reproduction of ideas about social reality is frequently acknowledged and assumed yet rarely investigated and demonstrated. Through an examination of the everyday realities of both news production and news reception, Journalism and Political Exclusion also shows how the current "crises" of professional journalism heighten the level of political exclusion experienced by various social groups.
Review
An exceptional piece of work by an accomplished scholar, Journalism and Political Exclusion sets a demanding standard for anyone attempting a unified analysis of journalism and media production, distribution, and reception.” Greg Nielsen, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Concordia University
Review
Journalism and Political Exclusion marks a welcome intervention on questions of communicative power, and the way that stratified audiences interact with news production and are systematically disempowered by journalism. This is an intellectually rich and stimulating book.” C.W. Anderson, Department of Media Culture, College of Staten Island (CUNY)
Review
This thoughtful, well-researched book should be required reading for specialists. Recommended.” Choice
Synopsis
A critical analysis of how and why journalism can frustrate audiences and inhibit their capacity to be informed citizens.
About the Author
Debra M. Clarke is associate professor of sociology at Trent University.