In focusing on the practices, politics and ethics of listening, this wide-ranging book offers an important new perspective on questions of media audiences, publics and citizenship. Listening is central to modern communication, politics and experience, but is commonly overlooked and underestimated in a culture fascinated by the spectacle and the politics of voice. Listening Publics restores listening to media history and to theories of the public sphere. In so doing it opens up profound questions for our understanding of mediated experience, public participation and civic engagement. Taking a cross-national and interdisciplinary approach, the book explores how listening publics have been constituted in relation to successive media tech...
In “I'm (Not) Listening: Rhetoric and Political Rationalities of Self and Other,” my primary aim is ...
Who are the people addressed by the media – audiences, readers, consumers, citizens, the public? Aca...
In this book Nick Couldry, media and cultural theorist from the London School of Economics, asks wha...
This article suggests how listening might be rethought as foundational to theories of the public sph...
This introductory paper posits ‘listening’ as a rubric for reframing contemporary media theory and p...
To date both research and policy on media and cultural diversity have emphasised questions of speaki...
Considerable attention in communication, media and social science scholarship is focused on voice, w...
The modern world is permeated by mediated sound. The technologies of sound recording, amplification,...
This accessible and thought-provoking book provides a critical insight into the relationship between...
This paper explores the literature on audience and citizenship with the aim of catching sight of so...
In today’s thoroughly mass-mediated world, audiences and publics are, of course, composed of the sam...
This chapter appears in the first collection in the English language to address the development of t...
Book synopsis: Governments in many countries fear voting turnout and political engagement is in term...
Governments in many countries fear voting turnout and political engagement is in terminal decline, t...
This book deals with the social, cultural and especially political significance of media by shifting...
In “I'm (Not) Listening: Rhetoric and Political Rationalities of Self and Other,” my primary aim is ...
Who are the people addressed by the media – audiences, readers, consumers, citizens, the public? Aca...
In this book Nick Couldry, media and cultural theorist from the London School of Economics, asks wha...
This article suggests how listening might be rethought as foundational to theories of the public sph...
This introductory paper posits ‘listening’ as a rubric for reframing contemporary media theory and p...
To date both research and policy on media and cultural diversity have emphasised questions of speaki...
Considerable attention in communication, media and social science scholarship is focused on voice, w...
The modern world is permeated by mediated sound. The technologies of sound recording, amplification,...
This accessible and thought-provoking book provides a critical insight into the relationship between...
This paper explores the literature on audience and citizenship with the aim of catching sight of so...
In today’s thoroughly mass-mediated world, audiences and publics are, of course, composed of the sam...
This chapter appears in the first collection in the English language to address the development of t...
Book synopsis: Governments in many countries fear voting turnout and political engagement is in term...
Governments in many countries fear voting turnout and political engagement is in terminal decline, t...
This book deals with the social, cultural and especially political significance of media by shifting...
In “I'm (Not) Listening: Rhetoric and Political Rationalities of Self and Other,” my primary aim is ...
Who are the people addressed by the media – audiences, readers, consumers, citizens, the public? Aca...
In this book Nick Couldry, media and cultural theorist from the London School of Economics, asks wha...