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Ian McEwan: A Novel Approach to Political Communication

Naor Cohen
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The article was published on 2014-09-23 and is currently open access. It has received 2 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Political communication.

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The Hermeneutics of Suspicion: Recovering Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud

TL;DR: The moralizing interpreters of Marx and Freud have been identified by as mentioned in this paper as a kind of hermeneutics of suspicion, which they call the "school of suspicion" of late nineteenth-and early twentieth-century thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Reader, the Text, the Poem: The Transactional Theory of the Literary Work

TL;DR: Louise M. Rosenblatt as mentioned in this paper argued that the reading transaction is a unique event involving reader and text at a particular time under particular circumstances, and that the dualistic emphasis of other theories on either the reader or the text as separate and static entities cannot explain the importance of factors such as gender, ethnicity, culture, and socioeconomic context.
References
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Book

Empire and Communications

TL;DR: In this article, the written tradition and the Roman Empire were studied in the context of the printing press and parchment and paper, and the history of paper and printing in the Middle East.
Book

Speaking into the Air: A History of the Idea of Communication

TL;DR: Peters as discussed by the authors traces the yearning for contact not only through philosophy and literature but also by exploring the cultural reception of communication technologies from the telegraph to the radio and finds that thinkers across the centuries have struggled with the same questions - how we can hope for contact with others, what has become of human beings in increasingly technological times, how new modes of communication have altered the ways the world is imagined and how we relate to others.
Book

The Phantom Public

TL;DR: The Phantom Public as mentioned in this paper is one of the seminal works of American political science and history, and it was one of Lippmann's most powerfully argued and revealing books, revealing the "disenchanted man" who has become disillusioned not only with democracy but also with reform.