Jan Jirák, Barbara Köpplová: Média a společnost: Stručný úvod do studia médií a mediální komunikace
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 160-162
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In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 160-162
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 160-162
In: Politologicky Casopis, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 156-158
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 483-500
'Dialogical networks' are communications that occur in mass media. One of their characteristics is that contributions of individual actors - politicians, journalists, representatives of pressure groups, etc - are distributed in time & space. (A politician can, for instance, react in the media to what another politician expressed publicly elsewhere). Another central property of dialogical networks is that an individual's contribution to a network can be duplicated, or even multiplicated (eg, what is said in a TV studio may be reproduced in several newspapers). Working in a broadly ethnomethodological & conversation analytical framework, we focus on two aspects of sequential organization - adjacency pair structures & repair structures - with the aim to clarify the respects in which they differ in dialogical networks & in everyday conversations.
Obálka -- OBSAH -- ÚVOD V MÉDIÍCH -- KAPITOLA PRVNÍ ŽIVOT V MÉDIÍCH -- Lapeni v síti bezprostřednosti -- Život ve městě médií -- Digitální a fyzické -- Antropotechnologie, člověkostroje, inforgové a posthumanita -- Protézoví bohové -- Božské bytosti v postmetafyzickém světě -- KAPITOLA DRUHÁ MÉDIA DNES -- Mediální archeologie artefaktů, činností a uspořádání -- Hluboké city v závratné rychlosti -- Charismatické technologie lásky -- Nepozorované vytrácení neviditelných médií -- KAPITOLA TŘETÍ CO MÉDIA DĚLAJÍ -- Vítejte v nezapomenutelnu -- Mimovolná média Martini
On the basis of the analysis of news content from 2008 to 2012, we describe in this article the tendencies of Czech media in dealing with foreign policy topics, using a combination of quantitative content analysis and qualitative case studies of selected foreign policy events. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses demonstrate that the coverage of political events in the media is highly personalised and viewed through the prism of the personal or political interests of Czech political elites and the conflicts between them. As concerns the diversity of the actors presented and topics covered, the Czech media produce a considerably restricted and more or less uniform stream of news commented upon by a relatively limited spectrum of actors, mainly Czech politicians. For non-political, non-governmental, and international actors, access to the debate is considerably limited. The print media tends to present major political events as power-based conflicts between individuals or groups, rather than as negotiations about public affairs supported by substantive arguments. In effect, Habermas's classical vision of the role of mass media in democracy, which is to promote rational discussion as a desirable form of public debate, is replaced with persuasion through emotional appeal, which has been widely criticised. At the same time, however, some theoretical traditions see it more positively as a less restrictive form of public discourse. ; On the basis of the analysis of news content from 2008 to 2012, we describe in this article the tendencies of Czech media in dealing with foreign policy topics, using a combination of quantitative content analysis and qualitative case studies of selected foreign policy events. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses demonstrate that the coverage of political events in the media is highly personalised and viewed through the prism of the personal or political interests of Czech political elites and the conflicts between them. As concerns the diversity of the actors presented and ...
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In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 443-455
The Czech Language Instit provides consulting services, viz, questions about current usage, to a wide audience, from curious laypeople to scholars, in an institutional (ie, academic) setting. The institute, represented by the Prague Linguistic Council of the Czech Academy of Sciences' Instit for the Czech Language, is accessible by phone, mail, & drop-in appointment to any interested speaker of Czech needing information on pronunciation, orthography, semantics, etymology, usage, et al. A staff of linguists is on hand to answer all relevant questions. The requests received & characteristics of those who have contacted the institute are described.
In: Politologicky Casopis, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 507-525
Political communication has been undergoing a profound transformation in recent years following the appearance and rapid spread of new media. The use of new media, such as social networking sites and other internet platforms, is increasingly being exploited by all types of political actors, but particularly by those involved in electoral campaigns. Attempting to explore the presence of these trends in the Czech Republic, this paper focuses on the Senate and Regional Council electoral campaigns that took place in October 2012 in the Czech Republic, with the primary aim of comparing the differences in new media usage between candidates. A comprehensive analysis was based on a dataset obtained by monitoring the use of various types of new media by candidates, namely traditional websites, blogs, and the online social networking sites Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. The results show that younger candidates in regional elections engage in online campaigning more intensely than older candidates. The findings also demonstrate that Senate candidates use new media more extensively than candidates for the Regional Council. The most commonly used new media in both types of elections were traditional websites and the online social networking site Facebook. Regarding the candidates' political affiliations, the analyses came to the conclusion that the usage of new media was generally similar for all major parties with one exception. The candidates from the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia used new media very sporadically and, moreover, most of them used no new media platforms at all in either type of election campaign. Adapted from the source document.
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 175-178
Obálka -- Obsah -- Předmluva -- Úvod -- Gramofon -- Jean Marie Guyau: Paměť a fonograf -- Rainer Maria Rilke: Prazvuk -- Maurice Renard: Smrt a mušle -- Salomo Friedlaender: Goethe mluví do fonografu -- Film -- Salomo Friedlaender: Stroj na fatu morgánu -- Richard A. Bermann: Lyra a psací stroj -- Typewriter -- Martin Heidegger: O ruce a psacím stroji -- Carl Schmitt, Buribunkové: Dějinně-filosofický esej -- Doslov k českému vydání: Všechny přístroje zapnout -- Bibliografie -- Podrobný obsah -- Obrazová příloha.
In: Politologicky Casopis, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 381-382
In: Politologický časopis, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 151-169
ISSN: 1211-3247
The article attempts to interpret changes in the character of communication strategies applied in election competitions during the 20th century. The most important change seems to be shift from cleavage-based to issue-based communication in election campaigns. Such a shift can be interpreted as the result of modernization process (individualizing) & the growing rationality of both factions: voters tend to support specific political parties expecting certain benefits, whereas political parties tend to emphasize those issues which can satisfy voters' demand. Over time, particular issues can, on the basis of successfully executed policies, be "transferred" into the ownership of specific political parties. When the communicated issue is salient, the issue ownership can bring advantages in polling. This brings a new dimension to party competition: Now parties have to compete with other agenda setters for (issue) dominance in the public, media & political spheres. Adapted from the source document.