Public Opinion: Developments and Controversies in the Twentieth Century
By (Author) Slavko Splichal
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
5th August 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Media studies
303.38
Paperback
384
Width 151mm, Height 230mm, Spine 21mm
481g
A survey of the historical roots, theoretical foundations and normative claims of 20th-century conceptualizations of public opinion. It re-analyzes leading traditions, such as those of Lippmann, Dewey and Noelle-Neumann, and reinvents some justly ignored ones, such as Tsnnies, Harrisson, and Wilson. The book critically examines popular modern research strategies such as polling and the "spiral of silence" model and looks at the role of the mass media in the formation and expression of public opinion.
A thorough treatment of normative issues that lend themselves well to graduate seminar discussions or provide the basis of points raised in undergraduate lectures. The book's theoretical bent also makes it easy to apply the study of public opinion to a number of societies, including emerging democracies. Public Opinion promises to broaden and challenge our perspectives of the field. * Journal of Communication *
The book stands alone as a comprehensive insight into theories of public opinion in the 20th century. This is a thought-provoking book that ought to find a place on all communication scholars' bookshelves. * European Journal Of Communication *
Salvko Splichal has done a wonderful job of remapping the intellectual history of public opinion. This is a remarkable contribution that deserves the widest possible readership among those concerned with the concepts underpinning the field of opinion research. * International Journal Of Public Opinion Research *
A remarkably thorough and meticulous overview of twentieth-century theories of public opinion, ranging from European to North American, theoretical to empirical, humanities to social-science approaches, Public Opinion makes a key contribution. It has a rare synoptic vision and acquaintance with the diverse literatures of public opinion studies. -- John D. Peters, University of Iowa
Slavko Splichal is professor of mass communications and public opinion at the University of Ljubjana and director of the European Institute for Communication and Culture.