ABSTRACT

The public sphere is said to be in crisis. Dumbing down, tabloidisation, infotainment and spin are alleged to contaminate it, adversely affecting the quality of political journalism and of democracy itself. There is a pervasive pessimism about the relationship between the media and democracy, and widespread concern for the future of the political process.
Journalism and Democracy challenges this orthodoxy, arguing instead for an alternative, more optimistic evaluation of the contemporary public sphere and its contribution to the political process. Brian McNair argues not only that the quantity of political information in mass circulation has expanded hugely in the late twentieth century, but that political journalism has become steadily more rigorous and effective in its criticism of elites, more accessible to the public, and more thorough in its coverage of the political process.
Journalism and Democracy combines textual analysis and extensive in-depth interviews with political journalists, editors, presenters and documentary makers. In separate chapters devoted to the political news agenda, the political interview, punditry, public access media and spin doctoring, McNair considers whether dumbing down is a genuinely new trend in political journalism, or a kind of moral panic, provoked by suspicion of mass involvement in culture.

chapter |13 pages

Journalism and Democracy

The debate

chapter |28 pages

The Political Public Sphere

An anatomy

chapter |19 pages

Policy, Process, Performance and Sleaze

An evaluation of the political news agenda

chapter |23 pages

The Interpretative Moment

The journalism of commentary and analysis

chapter |21 pages

The Interrogative Moment

The British political interview

chapter |17 pages

The Sound of the Crowd

Access and the political media

chapter |18 pages

‘Spin, Whores, Spin'1

The demonisation of political public relations

chapter |31 pages

The Media and Politics, 1992–97