著者: Tommaso Vitale 日付: To: ML movimenti Bicocca 題目: [movimenti.bicocca] Fwd: Research in Social Movements, Conflicts,
and Change (Volume 33) on Media, Movements, and Political Change
> Jennifer Earl and I are pleased to announce that our guest-edited volume of Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change (Volume 33), titled Media, Movements, and Political Change, is available. A brief description and the table of contents are included for your review.
>
> This volume of "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" explores the relationships between mass media, social movements, and political change. Since Martin Luther nailed his Thesis of Contention on the Wittenberg Church door in 1517, scholars and pundits noted that media play an important role in social and political change. This volume advances scholarly understanding of how activists and elites alike use books, newspapers, and Internet Communication Technology to advance their goals. Articles include analyses of the role of media in the (Anti)Abortion, Globalization, Labor, Townsend, and White Power movements as well as Barrack Obama’s 2008 campaign.
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> Table of Contents
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> Introduction by the Series Editor, Pat Coy
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> Introduction by the Volume Editors, Jennifer Earl and Deana Rohlinger
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> Expanding the Domains of Print Media:
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> “Literary Activists and Battling Books: The Labor Problem Novel as Contentious Movement Media” by Larry W. Isaac
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> “Outside the Mainstream: Analyzing Coverage of Social Movement Organizations in Mainstream, Liberal/Left and Conservative News Outlets” by Deana A. Rohlinger, Ben Kail, Miles Taylor, and Sarrah Conn
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> Contemporary Debates on Print Media
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> “Set in Stories: Standing and Demands in the Newspaper Coverage of SMOs,
> and the Townsend Plan” by Edwin Amenta, Beth Gharrity Gardner, Amber Celina Tierney, Anaid Yerena, and Thomas Alan Elliott
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> “Media Framing of the Pittsburgh G-20 Protests” by Rachel V. Kutz-Flamenbaum, Suzanne Staggenborg and Brittany Duncan
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> Online Media:
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> “What Happens When Professionalized Movements Go Online?” by Katrina Kimport
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> “A Social Movement Online Community: Stormfront and the White Nationalist Movement” by Neal Caren, Kay Bond, Sarah Gaby
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> “Acting in the networked public sphere: the Obama campaign’s strategic use of new media to shape narratives of the 2008 presidential race” by Daniel Kreiss
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> General Submission:
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> “Mobilizing in Response to Threat: The Case of the Ex-Gay Movement” by Jason Lee Crockett and Melinda D. Kane
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> Thanks to everyone who submitted and reviewed for this issue!
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> Best, Deana
>
> Deana A. Rohlinger, Ph.D.
> Book Review Editor, Mobilization: An International Quarterly
> Associate Professor
> Department of Sociology
> Florida State University
> Phone: (850) 644-2493
> Website: http://www.sociology.fsu.edu/people/rohlinger/