The future of the presidency, journalism, and democracy : after Trump

Author(s)
    • Gutsche, Robert E., Jr.
Bibliographic Information

The future of the presidency, journalism, and democracy : after Trump

edited by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr

(Routledge research in journalism)

Routledge, 2022

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume examines the effects of Donald Trump's presidency on journalistic practices, rhetoric, and discourses. Rooted in critical theory and cultural studies, it asks what life may be like without Trump, not only for journalism but also for American society more broadly. The book places perspectives and tensions around the Trump presidency in one spot, focusing on the underlying ideological forces in tensions around media trust, Trumpism, and the role of journalism in it all. It explores how journalists dealt with racist rhetoric from the White House, relationships between the Office of the President and social media companies, citizens, and journalists themselves, while questioning whether journalism has learned the right lessons for the future. More importantly, chapters on liberal media "bias," the First 100 Days of the Biden Presidency, gender, and race, and how journalists should adopt measures to "reduce harm" hint as to where politics and journalism may go next. Reshaping the scholarly and public discourse about where we are headed in terms of the presidency and publics, social media, and journalism, this book will be an important resource for scholars and graduate students of journalism, media studies, communication studies, political science, race and ethnic studies and sociology.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Introduction: How Trump Tested the Press, They Failed, and We Wonder, "Now What?"
  • Part I Trumpism and Its Attack(s) on Journalism: Fear, Phobias, and Fighting "Bullshit"
  • 1. The Politics of Fear After Trump
  • 2. Conservative News Audiences: A Lack of Media Trust and How They Think Journalism Can Improve
  • 3. Media Distrust and Republican Identity in Trump's Wake
  • 4. American and Cuban: Cuban-origin Voters' Interpretations of Trump and the "Socialist" Media Frame in the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election
  • 5. Counter-net of Tomorrow? Right-wing Responses to Deplatforming Trump
  • Part II Journalism's (Failed) Responses to Trump: From Dis-information to Social Distance
  • 6. Shifting the Frame: Trump's "Big Lies," Misogyny, and Cultural War Escalation
  • 7. Donald Trump and the Rhetoric of Dis-information: COVID-19, China, and Coverage of his Comments
  • 8. The Trump Effect on Rural Communities and their Newspapers: In Retrospect and On Recovery
  • Part III Journalism & Politics in Opposition to Trumpism: From Bashing to Biden
  • 9. UnFoxing Market Failure: Complicating Media Matters for America's #UnFoxMyCableBox Campaign for Digital Activism
  • 10. Trump's News Practices and Discursive Patterns in his New Moment as "Former President"
  • 11. From Chaos and Cage Fighting to Quiet and Calm: How Trump and Biden Changed Journalism's Relationship with the Presidency
  • 12. Returning to Neoliberal Normalcy: Analysis of Legacy News Media's Coverage of the Biden Presidency's First Hundred Days
  • Part IV Journalism's Ideological & Practical Crisis: From Norms to "New, New, New" Journalism?
  • 13. Media and White Supremacy After 45: Is Anti-racist Journalism Possible?
  • 14. Not Two Sides of the Same Coin: Avoiding False Equivalencies Teaching Political Journalism After Trump
  • 15. It's Time Journalists Take "Minimize Harm" Seriously: Lessons from the Trump Era
  • 16. Trump, COVID-19, and Authoritarian Populism: The Future of U.S. Technopolitics

by "Nielsen BookData"

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