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Politics, Social Networks, and the History of Mass Communications Research: Rereading Personal Influence
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Politics, Social Networks, and the History of Mass Communications Research: Rereading Personal Influence

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January 2007 | 342 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc

When the controversial book, Personal Influence: The Part Played by People in the Flow of Mass Communications, was published in 1955, it made waves across the fields of communications, public opinion research, political science, and marketing. Written by Elihu Katz and Paul Lazarsfeld, Personal Influence became the canonical statement of the "two-step flow" of communication, which posits that mass media flow to "opinion leaders," who in turn influence the behavior and opinions of people around them.

Throughout the last half of a century, Personal Influence has undergone rigorous critique, appeared in numerous citations, and become a key text in the history of mass communications. Why is a rereading of this text relevant now?

Upon the 50th anniversary of the publishing of Personal Influence, the editors of this volume of The ANNALS believed it was an ideal time to reflect upon the book's mid-century contexts and contemporary drawing upon enrichments of the field provided by feminism, critical and cultural studies, the new historicism, and progress in the social sciences. This unique volume of The ANNALS crosses generational, disciplinary, and national boundaries to piece together and pull apart a historically important text and use it to shed light on the contemporary environment.

Essays in this volume analyze the personalities who played key roles in the making of Personal Influence, their origins and social identities, the institutional organization of research in which it evolved, and the disciplinary consequences of its success. Other authors reread Katz and Lazarfeld's classic as a way to explore the relations between citizenship and consumption, the nature of media and political involvement today, and the relevance of the two-step flow paradigm for the study of contemporary audiences, social networks, and public campaigns.

A must-read for scholars, students, and professionals in the fields of communication, public opinion, political science, sociology, and marketing, this volume of The ANNALS dusts off a time-worn text and renews its significance in the field of mass communications with modern scholarly perspectives and contemporary methodology experience, inspiring a fresh outlook on this historical force.


Peter Simonson
Introduction
John H. Summers
Perpetual Revelations: C. Wright Mills and Paul Lazarsfeld
Susan J. Douglas
Personal Influence and the Bracketing of Women’s History
David E. Morrison
The Influences Influencing Personal Influence: Scholarship and Entrepreneurship
Gertrude J. Robinson
The Katz/Lowenthal Encounter: An Episode in the Creation of Personal Influence
John Durham Peters
The Part Played by Gentiles in the Flow of Mass Communications: On the Ethnic Utopia of Personal Influence
Paddy Scannell
Personal Influence and the End of the Masses
Jefferson Pooley
Fifteen Pages that Shook the Field: Personal Influence, Edward Shils, and the Remembered History of Mass Communication Research
Kurt Lang and Gladys Engel Lang
Personal Influence and the New Paradigm: Some Inadvertent Consequences
Thelma McCormack
As Time Goes By . . .
Michael Schudson
The Troubling Equivalence of Citizen and Consumer
Lawrence B. Glickman
The Consumer and the Citizen in Personal Influence
W. Lance Bennett and Jarol B. Manheim
The One-Step Flow of Communication
Sonia Livingstone
The Influence of Personal Influence on the Study of Audiences
Nick Couldry and Tim Markham
Public Connection through Media Consumption: Between Oversocialization and Desocialization?
Charles Kadushin
Personal Influence: A Radical Theory of Action
Robert Hornik
Personal Influence and the Effects of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign
Elihu Katz
Afterword: True Stories
 
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