ABSTRACT

The public relations of "everything" takes the radical position that public relations is a profoundly different creature than a generation of its scholars and teachers have portrayed it. Today, it is clearly no longer limited, if it ever has been, to the management of communication in and between organizations. Rather, it has become an activity engaged in by everyone, and for the most basic human reasons: as an act of self-creation, self-expression, and self-protection. The book challenges both popular dismissals and ill-informed repudiations of public relations, as well as academic and classroom misconceptions.

In the age of digitization and social media, everyone with a smart phone, Twitter and Facebook accounts, and the will and skill to use them, is in the media. The PR of everything – the ubiquitousness of public relations – takes a perspective that is less concerned with ideas of communication and information than with experience and drama, a way of looking at public relations inside out, upside down and from a micro rather than a macro level.

Based on a combination of the research of PR practice and critical-thinking analysis of theory, and founded in the author’s extensive corporate experience, this book will be invaluable reading for scholars and practitioners alike in Public Relations, Communications and Social Media.

part |88 pages

The theater of public relations

chapter |17 pages

Crisis

chapter |18 pages

Face

chapter |16 pages

Actors

chapter |18 pages

History

part |101 pages

The humanities of public relations

chapter |12 pages

Voices

chapter |25 pages

Persuasion

chapter |19 pages

Politics

chapter |23 pages

Ambiguities (or ethics)

chapter |20 pages

Humanities

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue

The gist of everything