ebook img

Seeing Spots: A Functional Analysis of Presidential Television Advertisements, 1952-1996 (Praeger Series in Political Communication) PDF

251 Pages·1999·1.56 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Seeing Spots: A Functional Analysis of Presidential Television Advertisements, 1952-1996 (Praeger Series in Political Communication)

Seeing Spots RecentTitlesin the Praeger Seriesin PoliticalCommunication Robert E. Denton,Jr., General Editor CommunicationConsultantsin PoliticalCampaigns:BallotBox Warriors Robert V. Friedenberg Manipulationof the AmericanVoter:PoliticalCampaignCommercials Karen S. Johnson-Carteeand Gary A. Copeland PresidentialCrisis Rhetoricand the Press in the Post–ColdWar World Jim A. Kuypers The 1996 PresidentialCampaign:A CommunicationPerspective Robert E. Denton, Jr., editor ReconcilingFree Trade, Fair Trade, and Interdependence:The Rhetoricof PresidentialEconomicLeadership Delia B. Conti Politicsand Politiciansin AmericanFilm Phillip L. Gianos ElectronicWhistle-Stops:The Impactof the Interneton AmericanPolitics Gary W. Selnow Newspapers of Recordin a Digital Age: From Hot Type to Hot Link Shannon E. Martinand Kathleen A. Hansen Campaign ’96: A FunctionalAnalysisof Acclaiming,Attacking,and Defending William L. Benoit,Joseph R. Blaney, and P. M. Pier PoliticalCommunicationin America,Third Edition Robert E. Denton, Jr., editor Reelpolitik:PoliticalIdeologiesin ’30s and ’40s Films Beverly Merrill Kelley, with John J. Pitney, Jr., Craig R. Smith, and Herbert E. GoochIII World Opinionand the EmergingInternationalOrder Frank Louis Rusciano, with RobertaFiske-Rusciano,Bosah Ebo,Sigfredo Hernandez, and John Crothers Pollock Seeing Spots A Functional Analysis of Presidential Television Advertisements, 1952–1996 William L. Benoit Praeger Series in Political Communication LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Benoit,WilliamL. Seeingspots:afunctionalanalysisofpresidentialtelevision advertisements,1952–1996/WilliamL.Benoit. p. cm.—(Praegerseriesinpoliticalcommunication,ISSN 1062–5623) Includesbibliographicalreferences. ISBN0–275–96645–3(alk.paper) 1.Presidents—UnitedStates—Election. 2.Advertising, Political—UnitedStates. 3.Televisioninpolitics—UnitedStates. I.Title. II.Series. JK524.B46 1999 324.7'3'097309045—dc21 98–56624 BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationDataisavailable. Copyright(cid:1)1999byWilliamL.Benoit Allrightsreserved.Noportionofthisbookmaybe reproduced,byanyprocessortechnique,withoutthe expresswrittenconsentofthepublisher. LibraryofCongressCatalogCardNumber:98–56624 ISBN:0–275–96645–3 ISSN:1062–5623 Firstpublishedin1999 PraegerPublishers,88PostRoadWest,Westport,CT06881 AnimprintofGreenwoodPublishingGroup,Inc. www.praeger.com PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica TM Thepaperusedinthisbookcomplieswiththe PermanentPaperStandardissuedbytheNational InformationStandardsOrganization(Z39.48–1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Series Foreword vii Robert E. Denton, Jr. Preface xi I. Preliminaries 1 1. Introduction: Presidential Television Spots 3 2. The Functional Approach to Political Advertising 15 II. General Campaigns 23 3. In the Beginning: 1952, 1956 25 4. The Democrats Ascend: 1960, 1964 35 5. Nixon’s Return: 1968, 1972 53 6. After Watergate: 1976, 1980 69 7. Republicans in Control: 1984, 1988 85 8. The End of the Millennium: 1992, 1996 103 III. Other Campaigns 123 9. Primary Campaigns: Who Shall Lead Us? 125 10. Third-Party Candidates: Another Choice 147 vi CONTENTS IV. Comparisons 157 11. Contrasts 159 12. Conclusions 203 Appendix: The Sample 211 References 221 Name Index 231 Subject Index 235 Series Foreword Those of us from the discipline of communication studies have long be- lievedthatcommunicationispriortoallotherfieldsofinquiry.Inseveral otherforumsIhavearguedthattheessenceofpoliticsis‘‘talk’’orhuman interaction.1 Such interaction may be formal or informal, verbal or non- verbal, public or private, but it is always persuasive, forcing us con- sciously or subconsciously to interpret, to evaluate, and to act. Communication is the vehicle for human action. Fromthisperspective,itisnotsurprisingthatAristotlerecognizedthe naturalkinshipofpoliticsandcommunicationinhiswritingsPoliticsand Rhetoric. In the former, he established that humans are ‘‘political beings [who]aloneoftheanimals[are]furnishedwiththefacultyoflanguage.’’2 Inthelatter,hebeganhissystematicanalysisofdiscoursebyproclaiming that ‘‘rhetorical study, in its strict sense, is concerned with the modesof persuasion.’’3 Thus, it was recognized over twenty-three hundred years ago that politics and communication go hand in hand because they are essential parts of human nature. In1981,DanNimmoandKeithSandersproclaimedthatpoliticalcom- munication was an emerging field.4 Although its origin, as noted, dates back centuries, a ‘‘self-consciouslycross-disciplinary’’focusbeganinthe late 1950s. Thousands of books and articles later, colleges and universi- ties offer a variety of graduate and undergraduate coursework in the area in such diverse departments as communication, mass communica- tion, journalism, political science, and sociology.5 In Nimmo and San- ders’s early assessment, the ‘‘key areas of inquiry’’ included rhetorical analysis, propaganda analysis, attitude change studies, voting studies, government and the news media, functional and systemsanalyses,tech- viii SERIESFOREWORD nological changes, media technologies, campaign techniques, and re- search techniques.6 In a survey of the state of the field in 1983, the same authors and Lynda Kaid found additional, more specific areas of con- cernssuchasthepresidency,politicalpolls,publicopinion,debates,and advertising.7Sincethefirststudy,theyhavealsonotedashiftawayfrom the rather strict behavioral approach. Adecadelater,DanNimmoandDavidSwansonarguedthat‘‘political communication has developed some identity as a more or less distinct domain of scholarly work.’’8 The scope and concerns of the area have further expanded to include critical theories and cultural studies. Al- though there is no precise definition, method, or disciplinary home of the area of inquiry, its primary domain comprises the role, processes, and effects of communication within the context of politics broadly de- fined. In1985,theeditorsofPoliticalCommunicationYearbook:1984notedthat ‘‘more things are happening in the study, teaching, and practice of po- litical communication than can be captured within the space limitations of the relatively few publications available.’’9 In addition, they argued that the backgrounds of ‘‘those involved in the field [are] so varied and pluralistinoutlookandapproach,...it[is]amistaketoadhereslavishly to any set format inshaping thecontent.’’10Morerecently,Swansonand Nimmohavecalledfor‘‘waysofovercomingtheunhappyconsequences offragmentationwithinaframeworkthatrespects,encourages,andben- efits from diverse scholarly commitments, agendas, and approaches.’’11 In agreement with these assessments of the area and with gentle en- couragement,in1988Praegerestablishedtheseriesentitled‘‘PraegerSe- riesinPoliticalCommunication.’’Theseriesisopentoallqualitativeand quantitative methodologies as well as contemporaryandhistoricalstud- ies. The key to characterizing the studies in the series is the focus on communication variables or activities within a political context or di- mension. As of this writing, over 70 volumes have been published and numerous impressive works are forthcoming. Scholars from the disci- plines of communication, history, journalism, political science, and so- ciology have participated in the series. Iam,withoutshameormodesty,afanoftheseries.Thejoyofserving as its editor is in participating in the dialogue of the field of political communication and in reading the contributors’ works. I invite you to join me. Robert E. Denton, Jr. NOTES 1. SeeRobertE.Denton,Jr.,TheSymbolicDimensionsoftheAmericanPresidency (Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 1982); Robert E. Denton, Jr., and Gary SERIESFOREWORD ix Woodward,PoliticalCommunicationinAmerica(NewYork:Praeger,1985;2ded., 1990); Robert E. Denton, Jr., and Dan Hahn, Presidential Communication (New York:Praeger,1986);andRobertE.Denton,Jr.,ThePrimetimePresidencyofRonald Reagan (New York: Praeger, 1988). 2. Aristotle, The Politics of Aristotle, trans. Ernest Barker (New York: Oxford UniversityPress, 1970), p.5. 3. Aristotle,Rhetoric,trans.W.RhysRoberts(NewYork:TheModernLibrary, 1954), p.22. 4. Dan D. Nimmo and Keith R. Sanders, ‘‘Introduction: The Emergence of Political Communication as a Field,’’ in Handbook of Political Communication, ed. Dan D. Nimmo andKeith R. Sanders(BeverlyHills,CA:Sage,1981),pp.11–36. 5. Ibid., p.15. 6. Ibid., pp.17–27. 7. KeithSanders,LyndaKaid,andDanNimmo,eds.,PoliticalCommunication Yearbook:1984 (Carbondale:SouthernIllinoisUniversity,1985), pp.283–308. 8. Dan Nimmo and DavidSwanson,‘‘TheFieldofPoliticalCommunication: Beyond the Voter Persuasion Paradigm,’’ in New Directions in Political Commu- nication, ed. David Swanson and Dan Nimmo (Beverly Hills, CA: Sage, 1990), p.8. 9. Sanders, Kaid, and Nimmo,PoliticalCommunicationYearbook:1984, p.xiv. 10. Ibid. 11. Nimmoand Swanson,‘‘The Field of PoliticalCommunication,’’p.11.

Description:
Benoit provides a comprehensive analysis of presidential television spots from every campaign that used this important message form, from the 1952 campaign through the last national campaign in 1996. More than 1,600 presidential spots are analyzed, from both primary and general campaigns. Republican
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.