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list price: $42.95
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Language Arts & Disciplines
published: Jan 2006
ISBN:9780889206298
publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Television Advertising in Canadian Elections

The Attack Mode, 1993

edited by Walter I. Romanow; Michel de Repentigny; Stanley B. Cunningham & Walter C. Soderlund, by Kai Hildebrandt

tagged: communication studies, popular culture, elections
Description

Can the strategy of negative political advertising developed in the United States succeed in Canada, or does this kind of advertising do more harm than good?

The year 1988 saw elections in both the United States and Canada. It also saw a turning point in the tenor of television campaign advertising. By the early 1990s there was a growing reliance upon negative political images and symbols.

This book is about that growing reliance. While focusing on the use of “attack” ads, Television Advertising in Canadian Elections provides a historical overview of the growth of negative advertising. It includes a discussion of advertisers’ intentions and strategies, an analysis of the ads played on both English language and French television and their impact and the ethics of political advertising.

This is the first book-length investigation of negative political advertising in Canada. Professional politicians, as well as anyone interested in election politics, journalism, communication studies or advertising, will find this an absorbing study.

About the Authors

Walter I. Romanow


Michel de Repentigny

Professor de Repentigny studies mass media and communication.

Stanley B. Cunningham

Professor Cunningham studies mass media and communication.

Walter C. Soderlund is a professor emeritus in the Department of Political Science at the University of Windsor. His books include Africa’s Deadliest Conflict, The Independence of South Sudan, and The Responsibility to Protect in Darfur.


Kai Hildebrandt is Associate Professor Emeritus in the Department of Communication, Media and Film at the University of Windsor.
Editorial Review

''[T]his volume makes an important contribution, both in terms of theory and practice, to understanding the permanent part that TV plays in modern elections.''

— James Gillies

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