Advances in Research Using the C-SPAN Archives
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189 pages
English

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Description

This book is a guide to the latest research using the C-SPAN Archives. In this book, nine authors present original work using the video archives to study presidential debates, public opinion and Congress, analysis of the Violence Against Women Act and the Great Lakes freshwater legislation, as well as President Clinton's grand jury testimony. The C-SPAN Archives contain over 220,000 hours of first run digital video of the nation's public affairs record. These and other essays serve as guides for scholars who want to explore the research potential of this robust public policy and communications resource.
Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1: Congressional Process and Public Opinion Toward Congress: An Experimental Analysis Using the C-SPAN Video Library, by Jonathan S. Morris and Michael W. Joy

Chapter 2: Discursively Constructing the Great Lakes Freshwater: Theresa R. Castor

Chapter 3: Considering Construction of Conservative/Liberal Meaning: What an Extraterrestrial Might Discover About Branding Strategy in the C-SPAN Video Library, by Robert L. Kerr

Chapter 4: What Can the Public Learn by Watching Congress?, by Tim Groeling

Chapter 5 Gendered Linguistics: A Large-Scale Text Analysis of U.S. Senate Candidate Debates, by Martha E. Kropf and Emily Grassett

Chapter 6: Microanalysis of the Emotional Appropriateness of Facial Displays During Presidential Debates: C-SPAN Coverage of the First and Third 2012 Debates, by Patrick A. Stewart and Spencer C. Hall

Chapter 7: President William J. Clinton as a Practical Ethnomethodologist: A Single-Case Analysis of Successful Question-Answering Techniques in the 1998 Grand Jury Testimony, by Angela Cora Garcia

Chapter 8: C-SPAN Unscripted: The Archives as Repository for Uncertainty in Political Life, by Joshua M. Scacco

Chapter 9: Protecting (Which?) Women: A Content Analysis of the House Floor Debate on the 2012 Reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, by Nadia E. Brown and Sarah Allen Gershon

Chapter 10: “Working the Crowd”: How Political Figures Use Introduction Structures, by Kurtis D. Miller

Chapter 11: Representing Others, Presenting Self, by Zoe M. Oxley

Conclusion

Contributors

Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 15 novembre 2016
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781612494777
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0005€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

ADVANCES IN RESEARCH USING THE
C-SPAN
ARCHIVES
OTHER BOOKS IN THE C-SPAN ARCHIVES SERIES
The C-SPAN Archives: An Interdisciplinary Resource for Discovery, Learning, and Engagement
Exploring the C-SPAN Archives: Advancing the Research Agenda
ADVANCES IN RESEARCH USING THE
C-SPAN
ARCHIVES
edited by Robert X. Browning
Purdue University Press, West Lafayette, Indiana
Copyright 2017 by Robert X. Browning. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
Cataloging-in-Publication data available from the Library of Congress.
Paper ISBN: 978-1-55753-762-1
ePDF ISBN: 978-1-61249-476-0
ePUB ISBN: 978-1-61249-477-7
Knowledge Unlatched ISBN: 978-1-55753-787-4
To Barbara Hinckley and Ira Sharkansky
Extraordinary professors and mentors both .
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHAPTER 1
Congressional Process and Public Opinion Toward Congress: An Experimental Analysis Using the C-SPAN Video Library
Jonathan S. Morris and Michael W. Joy
CHAPTER 2
Discursively Constructing the Great Lakes Freshwater
Theresa R. Castor
CHAPTER 3
Considering Construction of Conservative/Liberal Meaning: What an Extraterrestrial Might Discover About Branding Strategy in the C-SPAN Video Library
Robert L. Kerr
CHAPTER 4
What Can the Public Learn by Watching Congress?
Tim Groeling
CHAPTER 5
Gendered Linguistics: A Large-Scale Text Analysis of U.S. Senate Candidate Debates
Martha E. Kropf and Emily Grassett
CHAPTER 6
Microanalysis of the Emotional Appropriateness of Facial Displays During Presidential Debates: C-SPAN Coverage of the First and Third 2012 Debates
Patrick A. Stewart and Spencer C. Hall
CHAPTER 7
President William J. Clinton as a Practical Ethnomethodologist: A Single-Case Analysis of Successful Question-Answering Techniques in the 1998 Grand Jury Testimony
Angela Cora Garcia
CHAPTER 8
C-SPAN Unscripted: The Archives as Repository for Uncertainty in Political Life
Joshua M. Scacco
CHAPTER 9
Protecting (Which?) Women: A Content Analysis of the House Floor Debate on the 2012 Reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act
Nadia E. Brown and Sarah Allen Gershon
CHAPTER 10
“Working the Crowd”: How Political Figures Use Introduction Structures
Kurtis D. Miller
CHAPTER 11
Representing Others, Presenting Self
Zoe M. Oxley
CONCLUSION
CONTRIBUTORS
INDEX
FOREWORD
I was one of those geeky teenagers who watched C-SPAN. There are probably more of us out there than who will admit to it. Although I enjoyed watching a good congressional debate, what I really enjoyed was C-SPAN’s coverage of the campaign trail. I was exhilarated when C-SPAN would clip a microphone to a presidential candidate and let me “ride along” as he (and occasionally she) shook hands with voters in a donut shop in New Hampshire or in a pizza place in Wisconsin. Growing up in Iowa, I especially recall watching residents of my home state gather at middle schools to participate in caucus meetings, and I recall watching the luminaries in the Democratic Party gather in a farm field for Senator Tom Harkin’s Steak Fry. My interest in campaigns turned into an academic career, and I now publish extensively in the area of political communication, focusing on how campaigns target their appeals to various types of voters, often times through their political advertising.
When Robert Browning created the C-SPAN Video Library almost 30 years ago, he certainly made the lives of teens who geek out on politics a lot brighter, but he did so much more. First, he provided a vast data resource for those who study American politics. Second, he provided an amazing tool for educators to use. There was one point in my teaching career when I would reach for a VHS tape with a yellowed label (recorded in 2000) in order to show my students what really happened at a presidential nominating caucus; today, of course, I can call up that same video online from Purdue. But most fundamentally, when Browning started the C-SPAN Video Library, he created a video history of American democracy. We can’t thank him enough for his foresight.
The chapters in this edited collection are stellar examples of the types of research that can come out of the C-SPAN archive. The research questions posed—and answered—are varied, ranging from whether liberal and conservatives use those ideological labels differently in their speech (most definitely!) to whether men and women use different words in campaigns debates (no!) and how President Bill Clinton avoided blame during the Lewinsky scandal (through the smart use of rhetorical strategies). And the methods employed run the gamut, from content analysis to statistical modeling to rhetorical analysis. As I scholar, I was excited by all of the new insights I gained about American politics. As an educator, I was excited by the potential of assigning this volume to students in a research methods course, as it demonstrates how smart researchers can successfully take multiple approaches even when using the same data.
As we approach the thirtieth anniversary of the C-SPAN Video Library in 2017, it is important to celebrate the successes of the archive, to take stock of its current uses, and to plan for the future. There is no better way to do so than through the publication of this collection of essays. I trust that you, the reader, will enjoy it as much as I did. And now I must get back to the task of searching for some of those videos that so intrigued me in my younger days.
Travis N. Ridout
Thomas S. Foley Distinguished Professor of Government and Public Policy
PREFACE
T he chapters in this third edition of the series on research using the C-SPAN Video Library are a diverse set. All these papers were initially presented at a conference at Purdue University in October, 2015. Scholars from communication and political science came together there to present their research and explore ways that the C-SPAN Video Library can be used to advance our understanding of interactions in communication and political science.
This diversity reflects the maturity of research in this third year of the conferences. Scholarship has advanced in that different researchers demonstrate a range of approaches from their disciplines as they grapple with similar underlying questions. Because the conferences are interdisciplinary, we should not be surprised to see such divergent approaches.
In these chapters, we find researchers using experimental research, content analysis, conversational analysis, detailed studies of facial movements, and language in debates. Readers looking to understand what methods can be used to explore the political phenomena will find them in this book. The unity comes from the common interests of the diverse approaches.
While the approaches may be diverse, the basic questions being asked have much in common. From public attitudes toward Congress, to congressional enactment of legislation, to characteristics of debate language, to how politicians react when in informal settings, these questions all deal with issues of our democratic process.
Jonathan Morris and Michael Joy open the volume seeking to understand more about the public perceptions of Congress. This experimental work teases out the underlying causes for these perceptions. Since Congress is televised, they use this opportunity to understand how conflict and partisanship affect public opinion toward Congress. Since our primary democratic institution remains so unpopular, we need to understand more about the basic causes. Morris and Joy provide that in their chapter.
The second chapter, by Theresa Castor, takes a very different approach. The question here is about congressional influence on Great Lakes water policy. Congressional influence on policy is a common theme in other chapters, but each author addresses the question differently. In Theresa Castor’s chapter, her approach is based on a social construction perspective. It is a rich approach that looks at the framing of the issue by the participants.
Robert Kerr uses the C-SPAN Video Library to examine the rhetoric of liberals and conservatives. In a thought-provoking piece he searches the Video Library to find ways that liberal and conservative rhetoric surfaces in political debates. He finds that conservatives dominate the rhetoric and the branding, not only for conservatism, but for liberalism also.
In the chapter by Kropf and Grassett, we find an analysis of gender in U.S. Senate candidate debates. They analyze 942 debate statements from senatorial campaign debates in 2012 and 2014. They find no difference between word choice in debates between male and female candidates.
Stewart and Hall build on the previous work published in Volume 2 of this series by Bucy and Gong. They look at nonverbal and emotional expressions in presidential debates. Their work advances our understanding of appropriate and inappropriate facial displays during debates and gives us an understanding of the analysis of emotion.
Garcia’s chapter is the first of two conversational analyses in this volume. The second is by Kurtis Miller. In her chapter, Garcia looks at President Bill Clinton’s grand jury testimony. She uses a number of techniques to identify ways that the president evaded or redirected the question. According to Garcia, “These include evasive answering, reframing, reformulating, and extending or deviating from the answering role.” She speculates that President Clinton’s success in evading blame and his high approval rating may be a result of these techniques.
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