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Full Description
Race and ethnicity are increasingly central to our lived experiences of politics, yet they are often absent from studies of urgent questions in contemporary political communication. This volume responds to this crucial issue in the field, illuminating a multitude of ways that identity and power shape the interpersonal, mediated, and technological dimensions of politics. The book empirically illustrates the lack of race-focused scholarship in this area, while demonstrating how studying race/ethnicity as endogenous to politics sheds new light on the "big questions" facing multiracial, multiethnic societies.
Contributions address both heavily studied topics (e.g., misinformation, political trust) as well as topics that emerge through a centering of race/ethnicity (e.g., Hispandering, politically relevant entertainment media). They do so through diverse methodologies (e.g., ethnography, computational text analysis) and communities (e.g., Black & Hispanic Americans, the Vietnamese diaspora). Collectively, this scholarship aims to catalyze challenging conversations about how race and ethnicity can and should be integrated into the core of global political communication scholarship.
A groundbreaking contribution to the field of political communication, Race and Ethnicity as Foundational Forces in Political Communication will be a key resource academics, researchers and advanced students of communication studies, politics, media studies and sociology. This book was originally published as a special issue of Political Communication.
Contents
Introduction: Race and Ethnicity as Foundational Forces in Political Communication 1. #politicalcommunicationsowhite: Race and Politics in Nine Communication Journals, 1991-2021 2. Differential Racism in the News: Using Semi-Supervised Machine Learning to Distinguish Explicit and Implicit Stigmatization of Ethnic and Religious Groups in Journalistic Discourse 3. "We Never Really Talked About politics": Race and Ethnicity as Foundational Forces Structuring Information Disorder Within the Vietnamese Diaspora 4. Dimensions of Pandering Perceptions Among Hispanic Americans and Their Effect on Political Trust 5. Don't Make My Entertainment Political! Social Media Responses to Narratives of Racial Duty on Competitive Reality Television Series 6. Destabilizing Race in Political Communication: Social Movements as Sites of Political Imagination