Network Propaganda is the most comprehensive analysis available of American political communications from 2015 to 2018. Combining accessible descriptions of big data analysis, rich case studies of major controversies in American politics, dozens of colourful maps and illustrations, and media history, the book challenges the conventional wisdom that the present crisis in democratic societies is the result of the Internet or social media, fake news, orRussian disinformation. Instead, it argues that the present experience of a post-truth moment is rooted in four decades of American institutional and political dynamics. In the process, the book demonstrates new methods of doing research into political communication and of understanding the dynamics of politicalcommunication and change. For people who are not focused on American politics, it offers a new approach and new tools for diagnosing the sources of, and potential solutions for, the perceived global crisis of democratic politics.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Part I Mapping Disorder
- 1. Epistemic Crisis
- 2. The Architecture of our Discontent
- 3. The Propaganda Feedback Loop
- Part II Dynamics of Network Propaganda
- 4. Immigration and Islamophobia: Breitbart and the Trump Party
- 5. The Fox Diet
- 6. Mainstream Media Failure Modes and Self-Healing in a Propaganda-Rich Environment
- Part III The Usual Suspects
- 7. The Propaganda Pipeline: Hacking the core from the periphery
- 8. Are the Russians Coming?
- 9. Mammon's Algorithm: Marketing, Manipulation, and Clickbait on Facebook
- Part IV Can Democracy Survive the Internet?
- 10. Polarization in American Politics
- 11. The Origins of Asymmetry
- 12. Can the Internet Survive Democracy?
- 13. What can Men do against such Reckless Hate?
- 14. Conclusion