Lexington Books
Pages: 246
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-8995-5 • Hardback • March 2015 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-4985-1403-3 • Paperback • August 2016 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-8996-2 • eBook • March 2015 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Renita Coleman is associate professor at the University of Texas-Austin School of Journalism.
H. Denis Wu is associate professor of communication at Boston University.
1 The Importance of Image and Affect in Politics
2 Historical Traces and Relevant Concepts
3 The Role of Information Processing
4 The Methods Behind the Research: How We Did These Studies
5 The Two Levels of Agenda Setting: Issues and Attributes
6 Visual Cues in the Formation of Affect
7 The Valence of Affect: Accentuate the Negative or Put Your Best Foot Forward?
8 The Makeup of Affect: Emotions and Traits
9 New Media and Demographic Differences in Agenda Setting
10 An International Investigation of Affective Agendas
11 What We Now Know About Affect and Implications for Democracy
From the perspective that elections should involve the rational evaluation of candidates’ issue positions, campaigns and voters that focus on images and emotions are generally disdained. But Coleman and Wu argue that candidate images and voter emotions are central to the electoral process because they stimulate voters to evaluate candidates. Previous research in political communication has focused largely on the first level of agenda setting (addressing issues), but in this book, the authors analyze the second level of agenda setting (addressing affect). This work is unique in two ways. First, it focuses on the visuals of candidates, rather than their words, and assesses them as positive or negative. Second, it measures the positive and negative emotions candidates engender in voters. In doing so, it measures the impact that mediated affect has on elections. The authors use a multi-modal approach that uses experiments as well as surveys that vary across time and location. The result is an overwhelmingly persuasive argument that the candidate images broadcast by various news media play an important role in the public agenda during elections. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate, research, and professional collections.
— Choice Reviews
Image and Emotion in Voter Decisions makes a great contribution in political communication scholarship, specifically the role of visual communication in politics—an area that is clearly understudied. To borrow David Weaver’s words, the volume is an important addition to the agenda-setting and voting literature in many ways. It draws its strength from three key aspects: (a) the strong emphasis on the role of visual content to provide evidence for the second-level agenda-setting effects; (b) the combination of various theories of information processing and media effects models to provide a stronger evidence of the influence of politicians’ images on voters during elections; and (c) use of comprehensive data from four presidential elections in the United States and one in Taiwan—making the volume fact-laden—hence providing useful insights on the topics of inquiry. I would not hesitate to recommend this book to a researcher seeking to gain useful knowledge of literature that documents the power of visual communication in politics.
— Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
"The book fills a gap in agenda setting literature, I highly recommend it."
— Guy J. Golan, Syracuse University
“This is an important addition to the agenda-setting and voting literature in several respects. It brings various theories of information processing to bear on agenda-setting research, and it emphasizes the role of visual content in agenda-setting effects. It also analyzes the relative strength of first- and second-level agenda-setting effects on voting behavior in one Taiwanese and four U.S. presidential elections. As such, this program of work represents probably the only longitudinal effort so far to examine visuals for their second-level agenda setting effects.”
— David H. Weaver, Indiana University
Building on the cognitive approach prevalent in most political communication scholarship, this book provides a comprehensive overview of the role of visual information and emotion in news and its impact on voter decisions. It is a must-read for political communication researchers, educators, and professionals.
— Spiro Kiousis, University of Florida