Political Communication Syllabus
Political Communication Syllabus
Political Communication Syllabus
Tomlinson 221
TueThu 1-4, by appt.
215.204.5181
zpapacha@temple.edu
Course description
This course provides an overview of political communication theories, modes, means and institutions and serves as
an introduction to how communication scholars study politics and the media. We will cover prevalent political
communication theories and trends, the relationship between political institutions and the press both in the US and in
other countries, elections, debates, political campaigning and advertising, new media and politics, political
socialization, education, politics and popular culture.
Course Objectives
To become well-versed in the basics of political communication.
To learn about the latest research and trends in political communication research.
To practice and think about political communication theory and research critically.
To prepare work that can be presented at a communication conference and subsequently published.
To create and maintain a Temple affiliated political resource web site.
Reading materials
Perloff, R. M. (1998). Political communication: Politics, press and public in America. Mahwah, NJ: LEA.
Readings on reserve: Several required readings have been placed on reserve at Blittman. You are to obtain
those and make copies for your own use. All readings on reserve are required and should be completed as
scheduled.
Requirements
Research critique
Select a journal article (better to select a study, qualitative or quantitative) on some aspect of political
communication and critique it. The article should be no more than a couple of years old. Do not waste time
summarizing the article in detail the article summary should be no longer than a paragraph or two. Critique the
theoretical soundness of the study, its contribution to the field and significance, the methodology, interpretation
of results, writing, and organization. 5 pages, double-spaced. Be prepared to summarize your paper in class on
the day this assignment is due. Worth 10% of total grade.
Book Report
Select a book on political communication from the list provided or on your own (if you are doing the latter, you
need to get the book approved by me). Produce a critique of the book chosen, focusing less on summarizing and
more on analyzing the authors approach, the book content, and whether the goals of the author were met. I
expect you to address the validity of the authors approach, the significance of the topic, the soundness of
organization and the arguments presented, whether the material is interesting, worthy of attention and relevant,
quality of writing and style, where this books fits within the relevant body of literature, and whether it needs to be
updated and how. Summarizing the book should constitute about a third of this paper. 7 pages, double-spaced.
Be prepared to summarize your paper in class on the day this assignment is due. Worth 15% of your total grade.
Digital Democracy Project
This is our attempt to understand and contribute to political uses of the Internet. The class will be divided into
three groups, focusing on local, national, and global politics respectively. Your task will be to gather political
resources that (a) provide political information, (b) suggest ways of becoming involved with a particular political
cause or group, and (c) present or report on digital democracy experiments on the local, national, and global
level and present them to the class in HTML format. The goal is to connect the efforts of all three groups and
produce a political resources site, affiliated with Temple SCAT, and updated annually by this class. In doing so,
you will update the work of the previous class, available at http://www.temple.edu/btmm_ma/digitaldemocracy/
dd_page_1.htm. Worth 15% of your grade.
Research Paper
This is your final paper for the course, for which you can produce either a paper summarizing research you
conducted over the semester, or a research prospectus, or a critical analysis. The research proposal for this is
due April 4 . This needs to be written formally, following the research paper guidelines of the discipline. Use APA
or MLA, depending on the conference/publication this is directed to. Appoximately 20 pages, 40% of grade.
Participation
Your attendance and participation to class discussions is essential and expected. This is a graduate seminar,
meant to inform you on this topic but to also teach you to articulate your own opinions with confidence. All
readings should be completed before the assigned date, and you should come to class prepared to talk. You will
also prepare discussion questions for a specific topic, to be determined later. Worth 20% of your grade.
Special Needs
It is our desire that all students participate fully in the curriculum of our department. If you have a disability or special
condition that compromises your ability to successfully participate in this class, please notify me as soon as possible
and make sure you register with the appropriate University office. All efforts will be made to accommodate your
needs.
Honor Code
All students are expected to read and observe Temple Universitys Honor Code Policy concerning academic integrity.
Plagiarizing
When facts or other material are obtained from an outside source, that source should be cited properly in the text and
the bibliography/references section of your work. Plagiarism is defined as taking the words or ideas of another person
and presenting them as one's own without proper credit. Plagiarizing is considered cheating, and a student who
plagiarizes will receive a zero for that assignment and/or a failing grade for the course. If you are not certain that you
are citing materials properly, feel free to double check your citations with me.
Grading scale:
A = 100-93
B+ = 89-87
C+ = 79-77
D+ = 69-67
A- = 92-90
B = 86-83
C = 76-73
D = 66-63
B- = 82-80
C- = 72-70
D- = 62-60
59 and below = F
COURSE SCHEDULE
Reading assignments should be completed prior to the date for which they are assigned. You should come to class
prepared to discuss what you have read. This schedule is tentative you will be advised of changes. Readings other
than Perloff have been placed on reserve at Blittman.
DATE
TOPICS
READINGS
ASSIGNMENTS
INTRODUCTION
Jan. 23
Jan. 30
Feb. 6
Agenda Setting
1st level
Feb. 13
Agenda Setting
2nd level and Framing
Perloff ch. 12
McCombs, Shaw & Weaver The game is afoot
Ghanem Filling in the tapestry
McCombs New Frontiers
Reese Framing Public Life
Ghanem & McCombs The convergence of agenda
setting and framing
Tankard The empirical approach to framing
Entman Framing
Calhoun Habermas and the Public Sphere
Habermas Further reflections on the public sphere
Garnham The media and the public sphere
Dewey Search for the Public
Fraser Rethinking the public sphere
Schudson Was there ever a public sphere
Feb. 20
Political Communication
and the Public Sphere
Feb. 27
Civic Engagement
Spiral of Silence
Spiral of Cynicism
DATES
TOPICS
Perloff ch. 1, 10
Denton & Woodward ch. 1, 2
Lippmann ch. 1
Johnston Trends in political communication
Article Review
due
READINGS
ASSIGNMENTS
Mar. 6
Other perspectives on
public opinion and
politics
Mar. 20
Digital Democracy:
New media and politics
Mar. 27
Apr. 3
Apr. 10
Apr. 17
Apr. 24
May 1
Education, Political
Kraus Mass communication and political socialization
Socialization, Popular
TBA
Culture
Final Research Paper and Presentations due May 8
(during our scheduled exam time, May 8, 5:30-8:50)
Book Report
due
Research
Proposal due
Digital
Democracy
Project due
References
Burd, G. (1991). A critique of two decades of agenda-setting research. In D. L. Protess & M. McCombs (Eds.), Agenda setting:
Readings on media, public opinion, and policymaking (pp. 291-294). Hillsdale, NJ: LEA.
Calhoun, C. (1992). Introduction: Habermas and the public sphere. In C. Calhoun (Ed.), Habermas and the public sphere (pp. 147). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Carey, J. (1995). The press, public opinion, and public discourse. In T. Glasser & C. Salmon (Eds.), Public opinion & the
communication of consent (pp. 373-402). New York: Guilford.
Cappella, J., & Jamieson, K. H. (1996). News frames, political cynicism, and media cynicism. Annals, AAPSS, 546, 71-96.
Denton, R. E. & Woodward, G. C. (1985). Political communication in America. New York: Prager.
Dewey, J. (1927). The public and its problems. New York: Holt, 1927.
Entman, R. M. (1993). Framing: Toward clarification of a fractured paradigm. Journal of Communication, 43(4), 51-58.
Fallows, J. (1996, February). Why Americans hate the media. Atlantic Monthly, 45ff.
Fallows, J. (1996). Breaking the news. New York: Pantheon.
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Gandy, O. (1991). Beyond agenda setting. In D. L. Protess & M. McCombs (Eds.), Agenda setting: Readings on media, public
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