ABSTRACT

Contemporary global culture, rooted in neoliberalism and free market forces, increasingly emphasises appearance over substance. People and organisations are judged by image and reputation while social media encourages and enables us to develop our own public persona.

This book explores the rise of promotional communication with a particular focus on public relations (PR) and its role. Organisations, from local charities to multinational corporations, employ professional PR staff to manage promotional communication, and even public institutions must position themselves in the marketplace to secure funding and approval. To what extent has PR contributed to this culture of display, this masquerade of emptiness?

This book argues that the climate crisis demands not more performance but a new approach, one of ‘depth public relations’. This concerpt builds on ideas not only from public relations, but also psychology, sociology and philosophy, as well as introducing the voices of climate activists and others seeking a deeper relationship with the human and non- human worlds.

The proposed principles of depth public relations offer suggestions for theory and practice, with profound implications for PR and related fields, and will interest all scholars of the changing communication environment.

chapter 1|10 pages

Overture

part Act I|81 pages

Curtain up

chapter 2|22 pages

Playing the part

Identity issues in public relations

chapter 3|18 pages

Roll up, roll up

Public relations and promotional culture

chapter 4|17 pages

All the world's a stage

Public relations as performance

chapter 5|22 pages

Masquerade

part Act II|102 pages

After the masquerade

chapter 6|18 pages

Beneath the mask

A Jungian approach

chapter 7|23 pages

After the masquerade

Down, not out

chapter 8|24 pages

Public relations and the planet

Not a case study

chapter 9|20 pages

Curtain call

Depth public relations

chapter 10|13 pages

The after-party

Conclusions, directions, reflections