Published Online: 2024-05-04
Published in Print: 2024-11-06
© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelseiten
- Articles
- Does credibility become trivial when the message is right? Populist radical-right attitudes, perceived message credibility, and the spread of disinformation
- Can media literacy help to promote civic participation? It’s not quite that simple
- Media malaise or mobilization during repeat elections? Evidence from Israel’s three consecutive rounds of elections (2019–2020)
- Ageing bodies and beauty in selected Polish women’s magazines
- Viral challenges as a digital entertainment phenomenon among children. Perceptions, motivations and critical skills of minors
- Attention capital in populist network communication: When the free labour of citizens maintains the spiral of attention
- Emerging adults’ food media experiences: Preferences, opportunities, and barriers for food literacy promotion
- Cognitio populi – Vox populi: Implications of science-related populism for communication behavior
- Deficits and biases in the leading German press coverage of the Greek sovereign debt crisis
- Book reviews
- Evans, C., & Lundgren, L. (2023). No heavenly bodies: A history of satellite communications infrastructure. MIT Press, 256 pp.
- Moreno-Castro, C., Krzewińska A., & Dzimińska, M. (Eds.) (2024). How citizens view science communication: Pathways to knowledge. Routledge, 172 pp.
- Araujo, T., & Neijens, P. (Eds.) (2024). Communication research into the digital society. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. 274 pp.
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelseiten
- Articles
- Does credibility become trivial when the message is right? Populist radical-right attitudes, perceived message credibility, and the spread of disinformation
- Can media literacy help to promote civic participation? It’s not quite that simple
- Media malaise or mobilization during repeat elections? Evidence from Israel’s three consecutive rounds of elections (2019–2020)
- Ageing bodies and beauty in selected Polish women’s magazines
- Viral challenges as a digital entertainment phenomenon among children. Perceptions, motivations and critical skills of minors
- Attention capital in populist network communication: When the free labour of citizens maintains the spiral of attention
- Emerging adults’ food media experiences: Preferences, opportunities, and barriers for food literacy promotion
- Cognitio populi – Vox populi: Implications of science-related populism for communication behavior
- Deficits and biases in the leading German press coverage of the Greek sovereign debt crisis
- Book reviews
- Evans, C., & Lundgren, L. (2023). No heavenly bodies: A history of satellite communications infrastructure. MIT Press, 256 pp.
- Moreno-Castro, C., Krzewińska A., & Dzimińska, M. (Eds.) (2024). How citizens view science communication: Pathways to knowledge. Routledge, 172 pp.
- Araujo, T., & Neijens, P. (Eds.) (2024). Communication research into the digital society. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. 274 pp.