Acknowledgments
Introduction: Understanding Emotions in Mediated Public Life
1 Taking Emotion Seriously: A Brief History of Thought
2 Emotions are Everywhere: The Strategic Ritual of Emotionality in Journalism
3 Authenticity, Compassion and Personalized Storytelling
4 Towards a Typology of Mediated Anger
5 Shifting Emotional Regimes: Donald Trump’s Angry Populism
6 The Politics of Love: Political Fandom and Social Change
7 The Emotional Architecture of Social Media
Conclusion: Nine Propositions about Emotions, Media and Politics
Notes
References
Index
Karin Wahl-Jorgensen is Professor of Journalism, Media and Communications at Cardiff University.
“As wonderfully topical as this book is, I wish we had all owned it
and been able to work with our heavily underlined copies of it for
decades, given how superbly it advances and nuances our
understanding of the place of emotions in media and politics.”
Jonathan Gray, University of Wisconsin–Madison “Emotions, Media and
Politics moves a complex debate to an impressive new level by
articulating brilliantly how mediated political life cannot be
understood without taking personal feelings such as love and
anger seriously as compasses of rational decision-making. A
must-read for scholars of media and communication who want to make
sense of Brexit and Putting America First.”
Irene Costera Meijer, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
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