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Contemporary History of the Media. Sipos Balázs: Média és demokrácia Magyarországon (Media and Democracy in Hungary – in Hungarian) (Napvilág Kiadó, Budapest, 2010, pp. 230)
In: Társadalomkutatás, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 305-308
ISSN: 1588-2918
A jelenlét mint elvárás és kihívás a közösségi médiában, a kiterjesztett valóságban, illetve az okos eszközök áthatotta mindennapokban
In: Korunk: fórum, kultúra, tudomány, Band 28, Heft 8, S. 10-15
What are our possibilities for removing our virtual presence from just being there for production of signs and meanings? What are the conditions under which we can benefit from the experience of being fully present in our identity on virtual platforms and stay connected with others? Social media seems to be an opportunity for this, but it happens the exact opposite: we just become a sign for our identity. Communicating our fictional selfs and meanings with others, however, gives a presence to this sign of identity. Meaning effects and presence effects (Gumbrecht) are inseparable from each other.
This paper analyses some basic questions and gives a review of literature so further the ways in which media-practices are mapped and the impact of media usage on our identity-constructions, on our relationships with others and on our reflection of the world we live in can be researched in the terms of this project.
Family and media. The appearance of family as a topic in the political press
In: Társadalomkutatás, Band 32, Heft 2, S. 117-144
ISSN: 1588-2918
Ki kicsoda a hírközlésben?: (újságírók, a sajtó, a rádió és televízió szerkesztői, tudósítói)
In: A Révai új nagylexikona segédkönyvei
In: 1, A századvég magyarsága 2
A népszámlálások nemzeti-etnikai adatai mögött rejlő politikai tényezők: 1949-1990
In: Kisebbségkutatás: minorities studies, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 406-431
ISSN: 1215-2684
World Affairs Online
Diskurzusok és cigánypolitikák: romák az államszocializmusban
In: Kisebbségkutatás: minorities studies, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 456-474
ISSN: 1215-2684
World Affairs Online
Nemzeti és regionális identitásformák
In: Kisebbségkutatás: minorities studies, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 523-528
ISSN: 1215-2684
World Affairs Online
Médiahatalom
The power of media is outlined and the effects of mass media on the public opinion and on the parliamentary election. In the book the role of the political intellectuals is analyzed in detail and the battles of intellectuals of the opposite political camps on the field of the language of politics.
Does context matter? A cross-country investigation of the effects of the media context on external and internal political efficacy (accepted manuscript at International Journal of Comparative Sociology)
As a motivational factor of action, political efficacy is an important predictor of political behaviour. The term was invented to capture the extent to which people feel that they can effectively participate in politics and shape political processes. Today, we have a comprehensive knowledge of the individual-level factors (socio-demographic variables, political preferences etc.) that shape the level of internal and external dimensions of political efficacy. However, while it is widely demonstrated that media consumption influences the level of political efficacy, the country-level media context factors affecting it have rarely been studied. This paper reports the findings of extensive research on how two crucial features of the media context, the political significance of the media and the level of political parallelism in the media system, shape the level of external and internal political efficacy. The investigation draws upon the dataset of the seventh round (2014 – 2015) of the European Social Survey (ESS) and includes more than twenty-two thousand respondents from nineteen European democracies. The research hypothesizes that in countries where the media play a more important role, people have lower levels of external and higher levels of internal political efficacy. Political parallelism, which shows the extent to which media outlets are driven by distinct political orientations and interests within a particular media system, is expected to directly increase both external and internal political efficacy. Its indirect effect is also hypothesized, arguing that partisan media amplifies the winner-loser gap in political efficacy as a kind of "echo chamber". The findings show that in countries where the media play a major role in shaping political discourse, people have lower levels of external political efficacy, while the political parallelism of the media system indirectly affects the external dimensions of political efficacy. Internal political efficacy is, however, not related to these context-level factors.
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