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Electronic Whistle-Stops: The Impact of the Internet on American Politics
By (Author) Gary W. Selnow
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
25th March 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Internet guides and online services
Communication studies
350.97302854678
Paperback
264
Fifty years ago, the political whistle-stop tour was thus named because trains blew their whistles twice when making unscheduled stops in backwater towns. Like its distant cousin, the electronic whistle-stop brings the candidate's message directly to the people, but with one outstanding difference: the new whistle-stop offers politicians an accuracy, efficiency, and success at voter persuasian unimaginable to by earlier whistle-stoppers such as Harry Truman. As Selnow shows, American political campaigns have an extraordinary affinity for electronic devices. They have seized upon electronic bulletin boards, home pages, and electronic libraries. Since political campaigns are communication campaigns, Selnow concludes that candidates who successfully inform, persuade, enlighten, and even confuse voters will win votes. Selnow also examines the debate between those who argue that new technologies have improved efficiency and those who believe that the innovations have affected society in other ways. Scholars and students of American political communication must read this book; the lively style will also make it exciting reading for anyone interested in this new political tool.
Beyond a doubt, these are important observations about the potential impact of the Internet on American politics.-Political Science Quarterly
This is an important book for two reasons. First, it is among the earliest to document the uses and potential effects of the Internet on the political process. And second, it is significant because of how well it describes these uses and effects for readers. The book makes a mark in the body of political communication and mass communication literature and has the potential to become a standard in its particular niche of communication scholarship.-Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly
"Beyond a doubt, these are important observations about the potential impact of the Internet on American politics."-Political Science Quarterly
"This is an important book for two reasons. First, it is among the earliest to document the uses and potential effects of the Internet on the political process. And second, it is significant because of how well it describes these uses and effects for readers. The book makes a mark in the body of political communication and mass communication literature and has the potential to become a standard in its particular niche of communication scholarship."-Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly
GARY W. SELNOW is Professor of Communication at San Francisco State University and the develomsr of America's Voice, a nation-wide program using television and the Internet to air the political views of American voters. He is the author or editor of six books, including Society's Impact on Television (Praeger, 1993) and High-Tech Campaigns (Praeger, 1994).