Living in a saturated media environment, we are crowded from all sides
by persuasive messages and information. Advice, promotion and propaganda
form a spectrum of persuasion, and everywhere we see it performed in its
full theatricality, complete with actors, scripts, props and costumes.
Based on enduring rhetorical principles, these persuasive techniques and
the psychology behind them have become increasingly sophisticated during
the 'age of persuasion', a century of applied research in advertising,
advocacy, public relations, mass entertainment and social control.
Media, Persuasion and Propaganda guides the reader through the many
varieties of persuasion and its performance, exploring the protocols of
rhetoric unique to the medium, from orality and print to film and
digital images. Using case studies and exercises, this innovative study
poses challenging questions, such as: How do individuals and
organisations exert influence to build communities and networks? What
role do media play in communicating persuasive messages? How do we use
recent discoveries in cognitive science to promote a cause, advocate
social change or market ideas and products? How do we defend ourselves
against manipulation and undue influence, and when does persuasion turn
into propaganda?