The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia

This thesis focuses on the personalisation of mediated political communication and contributes to the personalisation scholarship by adding to it a non-Western perspective. Specifically, that from the communist and post-communist societies, by using Croatia, the latest member of the European Union,...

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Main Author: Simunjak, Maja
Published: University of East Anglia 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630155
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6301552017-02-17T03:25:30ZThe (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of CroatiaSimunjak, Maja2014This thesis focuses on the personalisation of mediated political communication and contributes to the personalisation scholarship by adding to it a non-Western perspective. Specifically, that from the communist and post-communist societies, by using Croatia, the latest member of the European Union, and its communist predecessor Yugoslavia, as a case study. The thesis starts from the premise that the political communication is more personalized, i.e. focused on individual political actors and their personae, in communist and post-communist societies, than in Western ones with which personalisation scholarship dominantly deals with. It is also hypothesized that it may have graver consequences than in the West. For example, it may weaken political institutions, sustain authoritarianism, lead to manipulation and deceit of public etc. Accordingly, main research question asked in this thesis is: What are the similarities and differences in the ways in which the personalisation of mediated political communication develops over time in a communist non-democratic system, a post-communist new democracy, and an established Western democracy? The question is answered through a longitudinal content analysis of Yugoslav/Croatian daily newspapers and fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis. The empirical analyses revealed that the personalized political communication indeed develops in a different way, and is connected to different conditions, in the transitional society, than is the case in established Western democracies. The most important finding of this study is that the mediated political communication was, unlike in Western democracies, de-personalized over time. The theoretical discussion of the possible causes and effects of personalisation in communist and post-communist societies contributes to the development of personalisation theory, and the empirical study provides original evidence of how and why mediated political communication was personalized in non-Western contexts. Furthermore, two new theories are formed that may help explain the personalisation trends in transitional societies. These are continuation theory and democratization theory.320.01University of East Angliahttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630155https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/51482/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 320.01
spellingShingle 320.01
Simunjak, Maja
The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
description This thesis focuses on the personalisation of mediated political communication and contributes to the personalisation scholarship by adding to it a non-Western perspective. Specifically, that from the communist and post-communist societies, by using Croatia, the latest member of the European Union, and its communist predecessor Yugoslavia, as a case study. The thesis starts from the premise that the political communication is more personalized, i.e. focused on individual political actors and their personae, in communist and post-communist societies, than in Western ones with which personalisation scholarship dominantly deals with. It is also hypothesized that it may have graver consequences than in the West. For example, it may weaken political institutions, sustain authoritarianism, lead to manipulation and deceit of public etc. Accordingly, main research question asked in this thesis is: What are the similarities and differences in the ways in which the personalisation of mediated political communication develops over time in a communist non-democratic system, a post-communist new democracy, and an established Western democracy? The question is answered through a longitudinal content analysis of Yugoslav/Croatian daily newspapers and fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis. The empirical analyses revealed that the personalized political communication indeed develops in a different way, and is connected to different conditions, in the transitional society, than is the case in established Western democracies. The most important finding of this study is that the mediated political communication was, unlike in Western democracies, de-personalized over time. The theoretical discussion of the possible causes and effects of personalisation in communist and post-communist societies contributes to the development of personalisation theory, and the empirical study provides original evidence of how and why mediated political communication was personalized in non-Western contexts. Furthermore, two new theories are formed that may help explain the personalisation trends in transitional societies. These are continuation theory and democratization theory.
author Simunjak, Maja
author_facet Simunjak, Maja
author_sort Simunjak, Maja
title The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
title_short The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
title_full The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
title_fullStr The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
title_full_unstemmed The (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of Croatia
title_sort (de)personalisation of mediated political communication in communist and post-communist societies : the case of croatia
publisher University of East Anglia
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630155
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