Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy

The article deals with the rise of populism in connection with the functioning of the media and the role of media literacy in the receptivity of citizens to populist messages. The assumption is that the media play a dual role in this context: on the one hand, they make people susceptible to populist...

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Main Author: Tomšič Matevž
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Sciendo 2023-09-01
Series:Politics in Central Europe
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/pce-2023-0022
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author Tomšič Matevž
author_facet Tomšič Matevž
author_sort Tomšič Matevž
collection DOAJ
description The article deals with the rise of populism in connection with the functioning of the media and the role of media literacy in the receptivity of citizens to populist messages. The assumption is that the media play a dual role in this context: on the one hand, they make people susceptible to populist messages, and on the other hand, they can train them to become resistant to them. The quality of media communication affects the level of media literacy, i.e. the ability of people to understand and reflect on messages that are being disseminated by mass media, both traditional and online ones. The author claims that media literacy is the main protection against negative media phenomena such as disinformation and fake news. At the same time, it makes citizens resilient to those political messages that contain these elements on which populist politics is often based.
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spelling doaj.art-d058fc0d3a1140cca58c97c4797ed8b32024-03-25T07:30:37ZcesSciendoPolitics in Central Europe2787-90382023-09-0119s145547010.2478/pce-2023-0022Populism, Media Messaging, and Media LiteracyTomšič MatevžThe article deals with the rise of populism in connection with the functioning of the media and the role of media literacy in the receptivity of citizens to populist messages. The assumption is that the media play a dual role in this context: on the one hand, they make people susceptible to populist messages, and on the other hand, they can train them to become resistant to them. The quality of media communication affects the level of media literacy, i.e. the ability of people to understand and reflect on messages that are being disseminated by mass media, both traditional and online ones. The author claims that media literacy is the main protection against negative media phenomena such as disinformation and fake news. At the same time, it makes citizens resilient to those political messages that contain these elements on which populist politics is often based.https://doi.org/10.2478/pce-2023-0022mediacommunicationmedia literacydemocracypopulism
spellingShingle Tomšič Matevž
Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
Politics in Central Europe
media
communication
media literacy
democracy
populism
title Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
title_full Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
title_fullStr Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
title_full_unstemmed Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
title_short Populism, Media Messaging, and Media Literacy
title_sort populism media messaging and media literacy
topic media
communication
media literacy
democracy
populism
url https://doi.org/10.2478/pce-2023-0022
work_keys_str_mv AT tomsicmatevz populismmediamessagingandmedialiteracy