Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 328
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-6527-2 • Hardback • December 2009 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-0-7425-6528-9 • Paperback • December 2009 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
978-0-7425-6529-6 • eBook • December 2010 • $42.50 • (£33.00)
Jeffrey P. Jones is associate professor of communication at Old Dominion University.
Part 1 Part I: Television and Politics Today
Chapter 2 The Changing Face of Politics on Television
Chapter 3 Rethinking Television's Relationship to Civic Engagement
Part 4 Part II: Entertaining Political Talk
Chapter 5 From Insiders to Outsiders: The Transformation of Political Talk on Television
Chapter 6 New Political Television: Questioning News Media's Regime of Truth
Chapter 7 The Competing Senses of Political Insiders and Outsiders
Chapter 8 Changing the Conversation: The Daily Show's Interviews and Interrogations
Part 9 Part III: Faking it (For Real) in News and Talk
Chapter 10 Muckraking Through Fake Newsmagazines: Michael Moore's Satire TV
Chapter 11 Fake News vs. Real News: The Case of The Daily Show and CNN
Chapter 12 Faux Real and Faux Play: The Parody of Punditry in The Colbert Report
Part 13 Part IV: Audiences / Fans / Citizens
Chapter 14 Viewer Engagement Beyond Information Acquisition: Celebrity, Talk, and Play
Chapter 15 The Expanding and Contested Boundaries of New Political Television
Chapter 16 Appendix: Methodology for Audience Research
This thoroughly revised and brilliant second edition brings up to date the story of political television that Jones began with the first edition, and it expands the analysis in exciting new ways, thereby solidifying Jones's preeminence as a scholar who truly gets how politics, entertainment, and citizenship intersect in contemporary American life. All those who sense that the likes of Jon Stewart are doing something important, and all those who need convincing of the fact, should move this excellent book to the top of their reading list.
— Jonathan Gray, author of Television Entertainment and Watching the Simpsons: Television, Parody, and Intertextuality
Media practitioners and critics, along with a small but growing number of scholars, have increasingly noted the role of entertainment programming in public discourse about politics. Most observers lament this apparent trend, doing so with little attempt to place it in the context of democratic theory or practice. Entertaining Politics helps fill this void and in the process provides a nuanced, provocative—and at times optimistic—view of the changing face of television and politics.
— Michael X. Delli Carpini, Dean, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania
These are more than interesting times—they are entertaining ones. And the risk of that is a trivialization of politics, a loss of seriousness, and a spread of ignorance. But does that mean we should simply deride popular culture and the media, or rather that we must address them all the more urgently? Jeff Jones has the answers to these questions, and he acts as a perfect guide along a path to our enlightenment.
— Toby Miller, New York University
Entertaining Politics shows us why we must take satiric television seriously. Jeff Jones' cases and insights help us consider and question the political landscape in important ways. The first edition has been warmly received in my undergraduate survey courses and graduate research seminars; this engaging and detailed second edition will be equally attractive to a wide range of audiences attempting to make sense of the changing face of politics on television.
— Sharon Jarvis, University of Texas at Austin
The book is annotated and could serve as supplementary reading for courses in US electoral politics, communications and politics, and mass media.... Recommended.
— CHOICE, August 2010
Praise for the First Edition:This is a fresh and stimulating contribution to the study of media and politics. Jeffrey Jones underscores in a compelling way the complexity behind such traditional polarities as 'information' and 'entertainment,' and sheds new light on key concepts such as 'engagement.' Looking at contemporary humorous political talk shows on television, Jones highlights with insight and clarity the inexorable links between politics and popular culture. His book marks a major step forward in our understanding of civic culture and its relationship to the ubiquitous media milieu. Demonstrating analytic depth and yet written in an accessible manner, this book will become an important bridge between political communication and cultural studies.
— Peter Dahlgren, Lund University
It is a second edition, but such is the significance of this work that for anyone interested in the intersections of politics and popular culture -- even those who have read the original -- this book is an absolute must-read.
— Media International Australia
New to the second edition:
· Compares the reporting of The Daily Show to that offered on CNN
· Examines Stephen Colbert's parody of right-wing talk show hosts, as well as his broader indictment of the culture of Truthiness
· Reviews the critical engagements of Stewart and Colbert on Crossfire, at the White House Correspondents Association Dinner, and with CNBC host Jim Cramer
· Includes Michael Moore's television programs, including his role as early progenitor of fake news as vehicle for political critiques and alternative politics
· Offers a theoretical reevaluation of the relationship between television viewers and civic engagement, including a study of Colbert's fans and the importance of "play" to the performance of citizenship
· Examines Jon Stewart's guest interviews as form of public deliberation, and his video redaction techniques as a form of critical reporting and political interrogation
· Explores the question of why conservatives, women, and minorities seem absent from the genre and investigates the genre's impact in the expanding boundaries of cyberspace