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The Role Of Emotions In Political Communication Notes

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  • February 12, 2022
  • 24
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Andreas schuck
  • All classes

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Role of Emotions
Lecture 1

Emotional media = Emotional citizens?

 Media coverage is becoming increasingly emotional/focused on emotions.
 Emotions sell! Good for business side of media.
 Politicians tend to be emotional in their speeches, which might spill towards
citizens who then become very reactive and emotional.

 Is this a problem or a blessing?
 Renewed interest in political engagement; topics are usually politicised.
 On the other hand, can create a wedge within society and turn citizens
against each other.

 Is the media to blame?
 Since they portray it, they might be firing up people to be highly emotional
and irrational.

Media Effects

 Media coverage can affect multiple dimensions:
 Knowledge: adds or changes what you know about things.
 Opinions: changing your opinion on topic, through framing for instance.
 Attitudes: changing how you act, core beliefs; harder to achieve.
 Behaviour: changing your actions; hardest to achieve
 Perceptions, stereotypes, prejudice, etc.
 Emotions

 Emotions can often be influenced by valenced news frames and then cause a change
on political opinions, attitudes, behaviour, perceptions, etc.

 If media coverage is able to trigger emotions, such as anger and fear, then they
should affect knowledge, opinions, attitudes and/or behaviour.

History of Media Effects Research

Powerful Media Paradigm (1900-1930)

1. Observation of enormous popularity of media
2. Principles of propaganda; media as manipulators
3. Psychological and biological theories

Stimulus-Response Model; you see/experience something and you respond immediately.
Hypodermic Needle Effect.

Considering the Black Box: a little bit less Powerful Media Paradigm (1940-1950s)

, 1. Discovering individual differences in the black box
2. Intervening factors: existing attitudes, opinions, etc.
3. No isolated individuals but connected members of small networks

Limited Effects Paradigm (1970s)

 Maybe we are able to control what effects we want media to have on us.

1. Shift to long-term effects of media; social change
2. Increasing knowledge gap; Cultivation of fear through the media

Return To Powerful Effects (1980s-Present)

1. Agenda-setting: media affect what people think about
2. Framing: media can affect how we think of political issues
3. Not everybody is equally affected; who is affected? (Moderators)
4. Underlying effect mechanisms; how are people affected? (Mediators)

Types of Frames

 Emphasis/Issue framing: people cannot understand the world fully but try to make
sense of it. To efficiently process information, people apply interpretive schemas or
frames to classify information.
 Ex: a study using “global warming” vs “climate change” in the exact same
article had different results; those who read “global warming” felt more
pressed to act and were more scared.

 Equivalency framing: different presentations of identical decision-making scenarios
influence people’s choices and evaluations; gain and loss framing.
 Ex: 80% survive vs 20% die

 Generic news frames usually used by journalists:
 Responsibility frame: government or individual responsibility; suggested
problem solution, call for action
 Conflict frame: disagreement; two or more sides; blame/conflict;
winners & losers
 Human interest frame: human face; personal impact on lives; sympathy/pity;
personal/private aspects
 Economic consequences frame: financial gains/losses;
costs/expenses; future consequences
 Morality frame: moral message; social prescriptions how to behave

 There are also crisis-specific frames, which are related to a single event.
 Issue-specific frames

 Thematic framing: statistics and figures, broader context, more factual

,  Episodic framing: individual story, more emotional.

 Since frames affect public opinion, they can consequently affect politicians and a
country’s policies.




Role of Emotions

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