Tuesday, December 30, 2003
Making the News: Anarchist Counter-Public Relations on the World Wide Web (search or order)
Taylor & Francis Group - Article
Critical Studies in Media Communication
Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
Issue: Volume 20, Number 4 / December 2003
Pages: 335 - 361
URL: Linking Options
Making the News: Anarchist Counter-Public Relations on the World Wide Web
Lynn Owens, L. Kendall Palmer
Abstract:
Traditionally, radical social movements faced a dilemma regarding media coverage: focus either on mass media, but lose control of their representation, or on alternative media, but fail to get their message to the broader public. The World Wide Web overcomes these problems, allowing movements to create their own media with mass distribution. However, it has two key weaknesses of its own: attracting audiences and mixing in- and out-group communication. In this paper, we show how the structure and content of the anarchist Web-based media work together to separate in- and out-group discourses. We then demonstrate how the anarchists attracted an audience to their Web media. The Black Bloc tactics at the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization brought an increase in media attention, albeit negative. We examine how anarchists took advantage of the larger audience created by this bad publicity and mounted a counter-public relations campaign online. We argue that the Web alters the power relationship between mainstream and alternative media without displacing the need for mainstream coverag
Critical Studies in Media Communication
Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
Issue: Volume 20, Number 4 / December 2003
Pages: 335 - 361
URL: Linking Options
Making the News: Anarchist Counter-Public Relations on the World Wide Web
Lynn Owens, L. Kendall Palmer
Abstract:
Traditionally, radical social movements faced a dilemma regarding media coverage: focus either on mass media, but lose control of their representation, or on alternative media, but fail to get their message to the broader public. The World Wide Web overcomes these problems, allowing movements to create their own media with mass distribution. However, it has two key weaknesses of its own: attracting audiences and mixing in- and out-group communication. In this paper, we show how the structure and content of the anarchist Web-based media work together to separate in- and out-group discourses. We then demonstrate how the anarchists attracted an audience to their Web media. The Black Bloc tactics at the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization brought an increase in media attention, albeit negative. We examine how anarchists took advantage of the larger audience created by this bad publicity and mounted a counter-public relations campaign online. We argue that the Web alters the power relationship between mainstream and alternative media without displacing the need for mainstream coverag
Quick Links
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Martin Kramer: Said's Splash, From Ivory Towers on Sand
The Native Informant - Profile of Fouad Ajami
On Spivak's experience of writing Death of a Discipline
Altschuler, Glen C. "Let Me Edutain You." New York Times 4 Apr. 1999, sec. 4A: 50