
Re/constructing Politics Through Social & Online Media
Discourses, ideologies, and mediated political practices
Special issue of Journal of Language and Politics 17:2 (2018)
Editors
[Journal of Language and Politics, 17:2] 2018. vi, 202 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 7 May 2018
Published online on 7 May 2018
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
- Re/constructing politics through social & online media: Discourses, ideologies, and mediated political practicesMichał Krzyżanowski & Joshua A. Tucker | pp. 141–154
- The impact of ‘super-participants’ on everyday political talkScott Wright | pp. 155–172
- Political participation on Facebook during Brexit: Does user engagement on media pages stimulate engagement with campaigns?Michael Bossetta, Anamaria Dutceac Segesten & Hans-Jörg Trenz | pp. 173–194
- Moral discourse in the Twitterverse: Effects of ideology and political sophistication on language use among U.S. citizens and members of CongressJoanna Sterling & John T. Jost | pp. 195–221
- Microphone pokes as prank or political action? Challenges to politicians’ visibility in the age of web TVÅsa Kroon & Daniel Angus | pp. 222–240
- A sentiment democracy? When (and when not) politicians follow their FollowersAndrea Ceron | pp. 241–257
- The Islamic State’s information warfare: Measuring the success of ISIS’s online strategyAlexandra A. Siegel & Joshua A. Tucker | pp. 258–280
- Social media in/and the politics of the European Union: Politico-organizational communication, institutional cultures and self-inflicted elitismMichał Krzyżanowski | pp. 281–304
- Social media and political communication: Innovation and normalisation in parallelMartin Karlsson & Joachim Åström | pp. 305–323
- Online negativity in Canada: Do party leaders attack on Twitter?Tamara A. Small | pp. 324–342
Introduction
Articles
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Kirkosová, Kateřina
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