Abstract
AbstractPolitical commentary is a key component of news coverage in any liberal democracy. Yet theorising the role played by political commentators in a rapidly transforming media sphere – further destabilised by voters’ increasing mistrust of expertise and of political and media institutions – is rare in the social science literature. This article adopts a mixed methodological approach to argue that political commentators today perform one or more of three functions – ‘public educator’, ‘value educator’ and ‘polemicist’ – with commentators now falling into one of seven types. Given the broadening and flattening of news media dissemination and consumption – and arguably the ‘dumbing down’ and ‘shallowing out’ of news media coverage in a postmodern social media age where truth and facts are too often subordinated by rhetoric and opinion – this article argues that the role of the academic political commentator is now more critical than ever. It also argues that academic commentators must offer not only objective descriptive analysis of political events but also potentially subjective normative analysis – in effect, narrative ‘guardrails’ – to remind voters of what is and is not acceptable political behaviour in a ‘post-truth’ anti-expert age.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies
Reference76 articles.
1. ‘Parents’ vital role in saving school system’;Williams;Courier Mail,2019
2. Moving forward with membership categorization analysis: Methods for systematic analysis
3. Marketing Fascism;Strom;Arena,2019
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Normalizing conflict – concealing genocide? Expert neutrality in the Armenian Azerbaijani conflict;Southeast European and Black Sea Studies;2024-09-03
2. INDONESIAN POLITICAL PUNDITS IN THE EYES OF THE MEDIA;SIBATIK JOURNAL: Jurnal Ilmiah Bidang Sosial, Ekonomi, Budaya, Teknologi, dan Pendidikan;2023-03-15
3. ‘A long revolution’: The historical coverage of Queensland politics and government;Politics, Policy and Public Administration in Theory and Practice;2021-06-15