Acknowledgments
Prelude
Chapter One: The Present Affect
Chapter Two: Affective News and Networked Publics
Chapter Three: Affective Demands and the New Political
Chapter Four: The Personal as Political: Everyday Disruptions of
the Political Mainstream
Chapter Five: Affective Publics
Notes
References
Index
Zizi Papacharissi is professor and head of the Communication
Department at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Her books include
A Private Sphere: Democracy in a Digital Age (Polity Press, 2010),
A Networked Self: Identity, Community, and Culture on Social
Network Sites (Routledge, 2010), and Journalism and Citizenship:
New Agendas (Taylor & Francis, 2009). She has also authored over 40
journal articles, book
chapters or reviews, and serves on the editorial board of eleven
journals, including the Journal of Communication, Human
Communication Research, and New Media and Society. Papacharissi is
the editor of the Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media,
and
the new open access Sage journal Social Media and Society.
"This book is very rich in its philosophical thinking, which
readers interested in political mobilization, civic discourse, and
networked publics may find inspiring. It also offers researchers
and professionals a foundation for further research and practice
via testing the propositions presented."--Yiwei Wang, Journalism
and Mass Communication Quarterly
"I HEART #affectivepublics! Zizi Papacharissi brings enormous
insight and much needed clarity to current debates about the role
of social media in political life. Rejecting binaries which ascribe
social movements to Twitter or Facebook or that dismiss all forms
of online participation as 'Slacktivism,' she instead acknowledges
the ways that social media has provided opportunities for new forms
of expression and affiliation, new 'structures of feeling' that
can
in the right circumstances help to inspire and expand political
movements. Her approach mixes theoretical sophistication with
empirical rigor as it forces us to rethink what we thought we knew
about
the Egyptian Revolution and the Occupy movement."
--Henry Jenkins, co-author of Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning
and Value in a Networked Culture
"Affective Publics transcends the already stale debate between
those who see social media as effecting political change and those
who castigate it for irrelevant chatter. Instead, in an original
move, carefully argued and empirically grounded, Papacharissi shows
us how social media facilitate emotionally resonant and
collaboratively constructed narratives which, in turn, support
civically significant 'soft structures of engagement'." --Sonia
Livingstone, co-author of Media Consumption and Public
Engagement
"A compelling and necessary read. Papacharissi shows how fact,
opinion and feeling are threaded together on social platforms to
create affective publics. Where the traditional accounts of
normative civic debate online have rejected emotion, this book
opens up the potential of messiness, intensity and pathos in
networked media." --Kate Crawford, professor, and author of Adult
Themes
"If you are looking for a rich and subtle vocabulary with which to
fashion an evocative description of the role of Twitter in cohering
social and political movements, Zizi Papacharissi's book (Affective
Publics) is what you need." --Barry Richards, Bournemouth
University
"Affective Publics is an important book for individual- and
mesolevel scholars of online activism. Future researchers in many
disciplines will certainly use Papacharissi's theoretical
groundwork to push forward our collective understanding of online
activism." --Karim Jetha, University of Georgia
"This book offers a promising framework for how scholars might
explore the ways that such contemporary emotive expressions online
might play out or become exacerbated in the anonymity afforded by
Twitter and other social media sites, and invites scholars to
further explore what such expressions might mean for democracy's
prospects now and in the future." --Lynn Schofield Clark,
University of Denver, lInternational Journal of Communication
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