2017
DOI: 10.1177/1354856517700381
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A sociocultural approach to study public connection across and beyond media

Abstract: This article presents an approach to cross-media use analysis suited to answering the question of how citizens from different sociocultural groups experience their freedom of information. The approach is based on normative democratic theory, is attentive to the dimensions of culture and media that lie beyond a predefined political dimension and is designed to analyse, from a citizen's perspective, how people experience a public world in which shared problems are addressed. To illustrate the approach, the artic… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The results of this study present an alternative view to the psychological notion that news consumption is the result of individuals’ motivations and abilities that dominates current research on audience fragmentation and stratification of news media use (as argued by Ohlsson et al, 2017; Trilling and Schoenbach, 2013). The systematic distribution of “legitimate” and “illegitimate” news practices and preferences in the social space suggests, in line with previous Bourdieusian media research (Hovden and Moe, 2017; Lindell and Hovden, in-press), that habitus promotes the formation of news repertoires. The fact that people in the same social class share news repertoires—without any explicit coordination—highlights the pre-reflexive and fundamentally sociological character of people’s orientations in the media environment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The results of this study present an alternative view to the psychological notion that news consumption is the result of individuals’ motivations and abilities that dominates current research on audience fragmentation and stratification of news media use (as argued by Ohlsson et al, 2017; Trilling and Schoenbach, 2013). The systematic distribution of “legitimate” and “illegitimate” news practices and preferences in the social space suggests, in line with previous Bourdieusian media research (Hovden and Moe, 2017; Lindell and Hovden, in-press), that habitus promotes the formation of news repertoires. The fact that people in the same social class share news repertoires—without any explicit coordination—highlights the pre-reflexive and fundamentally sociological character of people’s orientations in the media environment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…The Bourdieusian view contributes in as much as news repertoires are positioned in the wider social structure—that is, in relation to social positions and broader lifestyle and taste repertoires. It is against this backdrop that this study uses multiple correspondence analysis (henceforth MCA) to build upon the emerging research on the relationship between class and digital news repertoires (Hovden and Moe, 2017; Ohlsson et al, 2017; Lindell and Hovden, 2018). First, however, we must turn to the theoretical underpinnings of such an analysis.…”
Section: Positioning the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The project was designed as a broadly oriented, explorative investigation of people's cross-media use (Schrøder, 2011) and public connection, from a socio-cultural perspective (Hovden and Moe, 2017). It was not, from the outset, designed for the specific research question of sense-making after destabilizing political events.…”
Section: The Case Of Norway Methods and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this article, I mobilize and develop the public connection perspective to illuminate how audience’s engagement with fictional entertainment can forge democratically desirable and manifest orientations to the sphere of politics. The public connection perspective has so far proved valuable in the study of how the use of news and factual media connect people to public and political life (Couldry et al, 2010; Hovden and Moe, 2017; Kaun, 2012; Markham and Couldry, 2007; Ong and Cabañes, 2011; Swart et al, 2017). Couldry et al (2010) conceptualize public connection as ‘an orientation towards a public world where matters of common concern are addressed’.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%