when cultural engagement matters for the public sphere /
edited by Sonia Livingstone.
Portland, Or. :
Intellect,
2005.
1 online resource
Changing media, changing Europe ;
v. 2
Supported by the European Science Foundation.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Foreword; Contents; Author Biographies; Sonia Livingstone -- Introduction; Sonia Livingstone -- Chapter 1: On the relation between audiences and publics1; Daniel Dayan -- Chapter 2: Mothers, midwives and abortionists: genealogy, obstetrics, audiences & publics; Dominique Mehl -- Chapter 3: The public on the television screen: towards a public sphere of exhibition; Mirca Madianou Chapter 4: The elusive public of television news; Ulrike Hanna Meinhof -- Chapter 5: Initiating a public: Malagasy music and live audiences in differentiated cultural contexts.
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In today's thoroughly mass-mediated world, audiences and publics are, of course, composed of the same people. Yet social science traditionally treats them quite differently. Indeed, it is commonplace to define audiences in opposition to the public: in both popular and elite discourses, audiences are denigrated as trivial, passive, individualised, while publics are valued as active, critically engaged and politically significant.