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Democratic rhetoric and emergent media: the marketing of participatory community on radio and the Internet
This article offers a comparative analysis of the promotional rhetorics that surround the emergent media of radio and the Internet in the USA. It details the development of each rhetoric, provides an analysis of their ideological underpinnings and suggests that given the emphasis on the `virtual in Internet theory and promotion our current communication utopia will come to resemble its predecessor: a literal `no place in which the word `democracy becomes a consumption-based parody of what might have been the mediums actual democratic potential. The analysis of radios promotional rhetoric studies the writing and speeches of the National Broadcasting Company/Radio Corporation of America leader David Sarnoff, the newspaper editor Martin Codel, the educator Joy Elmer Morgan and the psychologist and media analyst Rudolf Arnheim. The examination of the Internet takes up the work of former Speaker of the US House of Representatives Newt Gingrich, Vice President Al Gore and Internet theorist Howard Rheingold
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
International Journal of Cultural StudiesISSN
1367-8779Publisher
SAGE PublicationsPublisher URL
External DOI
Issue
2Volume
3Page range
268-278Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes