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Presidental Elections & Candidates, Society & Cyberculture, U.S. Politics & Government - 2000-Present, U.S. Politics - Campaigns & Elections
Internet Election by Andrew Williams β€” book cover

Internet Election

by Andrew Williams, John C. Tedesco
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Overview

During the 2004 presidential campaign, 63 million people used the Internet for political information, 43 million discussed politics via e-mail, and 13 million used the Internet to make campaign contributions or arrangements for volunteer efforts. For these reasons and more, this presidential race has been termed the Internet election. The Internet Election analyzes the unprecedented role of the Web in the 2004 presidential campaign. This volume responds to the drastically changing political landscape and, specifically, its effect on the Bush-Kerry race with an eye toward future elections. Leading political communication scholars cover campaign websites, grassroots organizing via the Internet, candidate e-mail strategies, blogs, online discourse about candidates' spouses, and the gendering of (other than presidential) candidates on websites. Political strategists and Internet enthusiasts, as well as political communication scholars and students, will welcome this well-researched and informative book.

Synopsis

The Internet Election analyzes the unprecedented role of the Web in the 2004 presidential campaign with an eye toward future elections. Leading political communication scholars cover grassroots organizing via the Internet, candidate e-mail strategies, blogs, online discourse about candidates' spouses, and the gendering of (other than presidential) candidates on websites. Political strategists and Internet enthusiasts, as well as political communication scholars, will welcome this well researched and informative book.

About the Author, Andrew Williams

Andrew Paul Williams is assistant professor in the Department of Communication at Virginia Tech. John C. Tedesco is associate professor and director of graduate studies in the Department of Communication at Virginia Tech.

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Editorials

J. Gregory Payne

This book is a must-read. It outlines in detail the provocative power of new mediaβ€”how it has been used and what to expect in the future. The authors represent the brain trust in the field and their work advances our understanding of the brave new intricately connected Web world of political communication.

CHOICE

This reader serves as an excellent primer for those interested in learning how the Internet was used in the 2004 campaign, as well as prospects for its use in future elections. Highly recommended. General readers, lower-division undergraduates through practitioners.

Political Studies Review, May 2009, Vol 7 No 2

The broad scope of this book means that there is something for everyone.... This book will be useful for political communications readers.... As a teaching tool, selected chapters will be especially helpful for courses on campaigns and elections, providing students interested in studying the internet with much-needed context and scholarly sources.

Doris Graber

The Internet played an important and surprising role in the 2004 presidential election. For anyone eager to know how websites, chatrooms, blogs, meet-up forums and other features worked, The Internet Election is a gold mine of information. Its descriptions and analyses are essential reading for understanding what happened in 2004 and as background for judging the new developments anticipated for the 2008 presidential contest.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2006
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Pages
226
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780742540958

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