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The media and austerity : comparative perspectives / edited by Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes and Sophie Knowles.

Contributor(s): Basu, Laura, 1981- [editor.] | Schifferes, Steve [editor.] | Knowles, Sophie, 1985- [editor.]Publisher: Abingdon : Routledge, 2018Description: xx, 267 pages : illustrationsContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781138897304; 9781138897311; 9781315178912Subject(s): Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 -- Government policy | Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 -- Political aspects | Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 -- Social aspects | Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009, in mass mediaDDC classification: 339.52
Contents:
Foreword: Justin Lewis. Introduction: Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes and Sophie Knowles. Part I: The UK experience. 1. The UK news media and austerity: trends since the global financial crisis: Steve Schifferes and Sophie Knowles. 2. Media amnesia and the crisis: Laura Basu. 3. Austerity, the media and the UK public: Mike Berry. 4. The economic recovery on TV news: Richard Thomas. 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive: Richard Roberts. Part II: European perspectives. 6. Covering the Euro crisis: cleavages and convergences: Heinz-Werner Niensted. 7. Austerity policies in the European press: a divided Europe?: Ángel Arrese. 8. Safeguarding the status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain: Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco. 9. Race and class in German media representations of the 'Greek crisis': Yiannis Mylonas. Part III: Journalistic practice and the crisis. 10. Whose economy, whose news?: Aeron Davis. 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts: Simon Wren-Lewis. 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis' in journalism: Sophie Knowles. 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks and the attack on Dodd-Frank: Adam Cox. Part IV: Social media, social movements and the crisis. 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis: Christian Fuchs. 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case study of Stockholm and Latvia: Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru. 16. Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media to imagine the news in Finland and the UK: Niki Hatakka. 17. #ThisIsaCoup: the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere: Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz.
Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey 339.52 MED (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 015421

Foreword: Justin Lewis. Introduction: Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes and Sophie Knowles. Part I: The UK experience. 1. The UK news media and austerity: trends since the global financial crisis: Steve Schifferes and Sophie Knowles. 2. Media amnesia and the crisis: Laura Basu. 3. Austerity, the media and the UK public: Mike Berry. 4. The economic recovery on TV news: Richard Thomas. 5. The 'Geddes Axe': the press and Britain's first austerity drive: Richard Roberts. Part II: European perspectives. 6. Covering the Euro crisis: cleavages and convergences: Heinz-Werner Niensted. 7. Austerity policies in the European press: a divided Europe?: Ángel Arrese. 8. Safeguarding the status quo: the press and the emergence of a new left in Greece and Spain: Maria Kyriakidou and Iñaki Garcia-Blanco. 9. Race and class in German media representations of the 'Greek crisis': Yiannis Mylonas. Part III: Journalistic practice and the crisis. 10. Whose economy, whose news?: Aeron Davis. 11. 'Mediamacro': why the news media ignores economic experts: Simon Wren-Lewis. 12. Financial journalists, the financial crisis and the 'crisis' in journalism: Sophie Knowles. 13. Reform in retreat: the media, the banks and the attack on Dodd-Frank: Adam Cox. Part IV: Social media, social movements and the crisis. 14. Social media and the capitalist crisis: Christian Fuchs. 15. Narrative mediation of the Occupy movement: a case study of Stockholm and Latvia: Anne Kaun and Maria Francesca Murru. 16. Facebook and the populist right: how populist politicians use social media to imagine the news in Finland and the UK: Niki Hatakka. 17. #ThisIsaCoup: the emergence of an anti-austerity hashtag across Europe's twittersphere: Max Hänska and Stefan Bauchowitz.

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