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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Luigi Di GregorioPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781800881501ISBN 10: 1800881509 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 16 July 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: Foreword 1. Introduction to demopathy and the democratic malaise PART I SYMPTOMS 2. The contemporary crisis of democracy. Symptoms of the democratic malaise PART II DIAGNOSIS 3. The origin of the crisis. Individualized modernity and the narcissist syndrome 4. The communication and image society. The driver of the narcissist syndrome 5. Demopathy. Public emotion, pollcracy, followship PART III THERAPY 6. Towards a democracy of the imaginary. An evolutionary perspective 7. (Covid) Afterword IndexReviews'This book maps out a clinical picture of the current democratic crisis and offers a convincing diagnosis. Its symptoms are individualism, narcissism, new relations with time and space, the end of meta-narratives, the credibility crisis of political institutions and public discourses. These are the main signs of a deconstruction of post-democratic demos. Democracies are affected by a sort of autoimmune and degenerative pathology that affects all dimensions of life in society and ultimately destroys the demos itself.' -- Christian Salmon, CNRS, France Especially when confronting the pandemic's extraordinary, dramatic event, the debate about contemporary democratic malaise becomes even more relevant. Di Gregorio originally analyzes the explanations of that malaise through the vicious circle involving leaders, media, and citizens. Thus, the only appropriate therapy is to increase public awareness and to face democratic problems with feasible provisions. By looking at symptoms, diagnosis and therapy, this book deserves the greatest attention for all democrats who would like to heal our self-inflicted illnesses.' -- Leonardo Morlino, LUISS Guido Carli, Italy 'In his ground-breaking book, Professor Luigi Di Gregorio presents a multi-disciplinary, thought-provoking analysis of the role of all forms of political mass media communication in Western democracies in an era of perpetual crisis management politics. He argues that governments are relying too heavily on public opinion research to make decisions, turning leaders into followers, and in the process, destroying the very fabric of democracy as we know it today. He offers an innovative solution to respond to this crisis, as he argues that attempts to deal with it thus far have been unsuccessful. This book is a must read for students, scholars, political strategists and the general public who seek to better understand the rapidly changing dynamics in democracies around the globe.' -- Bruce I. Newman, DePaul University, US 'This work offers a convincing analysis that stresses the mutual causation between political leadership, citizens, and the media. I am confident that promising (and achievable) cures follow logically from this analysis. Demopathy and the Democratic Malaise is an outstanding book that democrats anywhere should pay close attention to.' -- From the Foreword by Arend Lijphart, University of California, San Diego, US 'This work offers a convincing analysis that stresses the mutual causation between political leadership, citizens, and the media. I am confident that promising (and achievable) cures follow logically from this analysis. Demopathy and the Democratic Malaise is an outstanding book that democrats anywhere should pay close attention to.' - From the Foreword by Arend Lijphart, University of California, San Diego, US - Leonardo Morlino, LUISS Guido Carli, Italy - Bruce I. Newman, DePaul University, US - Christian Salmon, CNRS, France 'Especially when confronting the pandemic's extraordinary, dramatic event, the debate about contemporary democratic malaise becomes even more relevant. Di Gregorio originally analyzes the explanations of that malaise through the vicious circle involving leaders, media, and citizens. Thus, the only appropriate therapy is to increase public awareness and to face democratic problems with feasible provisions. By looking at symptoms, diagnosis and therapy, this book deserves the greatest attention for all democrats who would like to heal our self-inflicted illnesses.' -- Leonardo Morlino, LUISS Guido Carli, Italy 'In his ground-breaking book, Professor Luigi Di Gregorio presents a multi-disciplinary, thought-provoking analysis of the role of all forms of political mass media communication in Western democracies in an era of perpetual crisis management politics. He argues that governments are relying too heavily on public opinion research to make decisions, turning leaders into followers, and in the process, destroying the very fabric of democracy as we know it today. He offers an innovative solution to respond to this crisis, as he argues that attempts to deal with it thus far have been unsuccessful. This book is a must read for students, scholars, political strategists and the general public who seek to better understand the rapidly changing dynamics in democracies around the globe.' -- Bruce I. Newman, DePaul University, US 'This work offers a convincing analysis that stresses the mutual causation between political leadership, citizens, and the media. I am confident that promising (and achievable) cures follow logically from this analysis. Demopathy and the Democratic Malaise is an outstanding book that democrats anywhere should pay close attention to.' -- From the Foreword by Arend Lijphart, University of California, San Diego, US ‘This work offers a convincing analysis that stresses the mutual causation between political leadership, citizens, and the media. I am confident that promising (and achievable) cures follow logically from this analysis. Demopathy and the Democratic Malaise is an outstanding book that democrats anywhere should pay close attention to.’ Author InformationLuigi Di Gregorio, Lecturer of Political and Public Communication, Department of Humanities, Communication and Tourism, Tuscia University, Italy Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |