1st Edition

Marketing Democracy Public Opinion and Media Formation in Democratic Societies

By Catherine Paradeise Copyright 1990
    364 Pages
    by Routledge

    362 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines mass marketing techniques in a political rather than economic context. The authors' thesis remains persuasive: democratic politics, precisely because it requires mass support for its legitimation, increases the need for public opinion to be channelized and focused. This is precisely the task of marketing in the political process.

    Increasingly, advanced societies are involved in symbolic rather than direct forms of struggle. As a result, management of ideas becomes crucial to both political survival and economic expansion. Romain Laufer and Catherine Paradeise argue that public opinion and media formation is built into the fabric of Western political culture, dating from the Sophists in ancient Greece through Machiavelli in the aristocratic baronies of pre-capitalist Europe. With the rise of the bureaucratic-administrative state in the West, the need for persuasive public opinion analysis became part of the fabric of the advanced Western democratic and capitalist nations.

    The volume benefits from authors trained and familiar with the traditions of both the United States and Europe. They are able to consider contrasts in marketing styles as well as continuities of contents among advanced nation-states. No simple "how-to" manual, this bracingly different volume discusses its subject with an easy command of the philosophical and cultural literatures, as well as the major classics of economics, sociology, and political science.

    1: Sophism and Marketing; 2: Laissez-Faire and the Crisis of Legitimacy; 3: Counting—from a Symbolic Procedure to a Pragmatic Procedure; 4: From the Market Price to the Product Image; 5: From the Vote to the Survey; 6: From Bureaucratic Counting to Social Indicators; 7: Rhetoric: The Method of Discourse; 8: Pragmatism: The Formation of the Cybernetic Ideology; 9: The Workings of Cybernetic Ideology; 10: Social Classes and Statistical Destiny; 11: Managing the Impossible; 12: 1989: Two Centuries Later; Conclusion

    Biography

    Catherine Paradeise