Lexington Books
Pages: 266
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-1-4985-6511-0 • Hardback • March 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-6513-4 • Paperback • December 2019 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-6512-7 • eBook • March 2018 • $42.50 • (£33.00)
Jim A. Kuypers is professor of rhetoric and political communication at Virginia Tech.
1.The 2016 Presidential Campaign, the News, and the Republic
Jim A. Kuypers
2.Fact or Fiction: Defining Fake News during the 2016 US Presidential Election
Abe Aamidor
3.The Othering of Donald Trump and His Supporters
Stephen D. Cooper
4.Donald J. Trump’s Use of Twitter in the 2016 Campaign
Katherine Haenschen, Mike Horning, Jim A. Kuypers
5.The Pundit Problem: A Look at Bias and Negativity in Cable News Coverage as the 2016 Election Came to a Close
Mike Horning
6.News Media Framing of the Donald J. Trump and Hillary Clinton 2016 Presidential Nomination Acceptance Speeches: Terministic Screens and the Discovery of the Worldview and Bias of the Press
Jim A. Kuypers
7.Social Media Candidate Attacks and Hillary Clinton’s Failed Narrative in the 2016 Presidential Campaign
Stephanie A. Martin and Andrea J. Terry
8.Iconographic Tracking of Pepe the Frog Meme through the 2016 Presidential Campaign
Natalia Mielczarek
9.Entertainment News and Satire in the 2016 Presidential Election
Joseph M. Valezano III and Chad Painter
10.Journalistic Hegemony of “Blue Privilege:” Tracing the Use of Identity Politics toward a Political Economy of News Coverage
Ben Voth
11.Sports Figures, Social Commentary, and the Role of Sports Journalism during the 2016 Presidential Election
Erin Whiteside
Index
About the Contributors
Probably since the earliest days of campaigns and elections in the United States, no one with the claim to be an “expert” has gotten more wrong than during the 2016 presidential election. This is why we need scholars who have the time to drill deeply into the data to let us know what really happened and why. The 2016 American Presidential Campaign and the News: Implications for American Democracy and the Republic is, thus, extremely timely. The broad range of essays covers almost every aspect of the campaign, especially its communications tactics, technology, and innovations. Journalists, political commentators, scholars, and students will be equally enlightened by its revelations. Moreover, the wisdom of the book applies to post-election discourse, which is vital to understand before the next election.
— David D. Perlmutter, Dean and Professor of the College of Media & Communication, Texas Tech University, and author of Blogwars: The New Political Battleground
The 2016 American Presidential Campaign and the News: Implications for American Democracy and the Republic is concerned with the role the American media played in the highly contested political slugfest that was the 2016 American presidential election. It is a multifaceted collection of very readable essays written by a diverse group of scholars who thoughtfully describe, analyze, and explain the role of the American media in the elections from a variety of theoretical, methodological, and disciplinary perspectives. Taken together, the essays constitute a rich assemblage of incisive analyses that illuminate political events and phenomena that have become part of the language of American and global politics.
— Lyombe Eko, Texas Tech University