Media and the public sphere Flashcards

1
Q

Jürgen Habermam and the public sphere

A
  • 1929: broke away from Marxism (liberal)
  • describes the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere
  • new culture of public discussion emerges in coffeehouses (‘bourgeois’ class of men) - forming public opinion
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2
Q

Liberal public sphere

A

Based on the ideals of universal access, free speech, the authority of a good argument instead of class
- public opinion is baseline
- press freedom (4th estate)

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3
Q

Four main critiques again Habermam’s public sphere

A

Decline in the late 19th - 20th century
- too pessimistic
- Does not properly reflect how people make decisions: excludes personal and emotional factors (rather than rational)
- Idealises the ‘bourgeois sphere’ neglects certain groups of race, class and gender (E.g women, POC, working-class); not actually a democratic notion
- neglects power relations; dominant groups and mass media can shape public opinion; not a neutral platform

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4
Q

Media/press and the public sphere

A

Media and the press central: essential for well-informed citizens to make informed decisions

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5
Q

Habermam’s revised public sphere (after critique)

A
  • Public sphere as normative concept: what should be the case vs what is the case (goal)
  • PS as network for communication
  • multiple spheres: communication between them is possible
  • PS is not rational argument: emotional & personal discourse influencing public opinion as well
  • commercialisation of public discourse remains
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6
Q

Habermams ‘Pseudo-sphere’

A
  • The media is commercialised: entertainment and consumerism focused
  • Profit above well-informed citizens; depoliticising the public sphere (less engaged in political action / less informed)
  • Public sphere is not a ‘public’ thing anymore; people are only consuming instead of discussing
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7
Q

Public service broadcasting
- Curran

A
  • Difference between commercial media and public service media; intentions are to publicly inform and support the ideals of the public sphere
  • Goal to improve public debate
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8
Q

Alternative radical-democratic view of the public sphere
- Fraser

A
  • conflict is inevitable, democracy is not simply about reaching reasoned agreement
  • pubic sphere is space for people to fight to get their voices heard
  • multiple spheres: public and counter (traditional; white upper-class men/counter; excluded groups) Counter public spheres (marginalized groups come together)
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9
Q

Sluice-gate model

A
  • not one single public sphere, multiple spheres (Fraser)
  • Sluice (sluss Trollhättan) represents all of the spheres emptying into the same discussion
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10
Q

The internet and the public sphere
(pros)

A
  • ability to democratise
  • forms networks
  • “network allows citizens to change their relationship to public sphere” - Benkler
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11
Q

The internet and the public sphere
(cons)

A
  • fragmentation / polarization
  • quality of information
  • platform power and targeted manipulation
  • must fund quality information and companies have responsibility
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