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This collection examines Axel Honneth's theory of recognition and the crucial role played by the media in struggles for recognition. It brings together debates on controversial aspects of Honneth's work and a set of intriguing empirical studies including with slum-dwelling adolescents, leprosy patients and women exposed to child labor exploitation1. Introduction 2. Axel Honneth's Theory of Recognition as a Research Program PART I: MASS MEDIA: A SITE OF STRUGGLE 3. Mass Media Representation, Identity-Building and Social Conflicts: Towards a Recognition-Theoretical Approach 4. The Morality of Recognition: Adolescent Slum-Dwellers Discuss a TV Series Representation of their Lives 5. Recognition and Ideology: Assessing Justice and Injustice in the Case of Child Domestic Labor PART II: STRUGGLE THROUGH SOCIAL NETWORK SITES 6. Struggles for Recognition in a Digital Era 7. Recognition, Feelings of Injustice and Claim Justification: Deaf People's Storytelling on the Internet 8. Recognition as an Ongoing Struggle: Conflicts Involving Racism and Homophobia in the Networked Media Environment PART III: STRUGGLE, MEDIA AND THE DYNAMICS OF CULTURAL CHANGE 9. Media, Cultural Change and the Dynamics of Recognition 10. Recognition without Struggles: Leprosy in Brazilian Daily Newspapers 11. Recognition and Moral Progress: Discourses on Disability in the Media 12. Conclusion
'Recognition and the Media presents the first in-depth investigation into the complex interactions between modern communication systems and the relations of recognition at the heart of contemporary societies. With its wealth of empirical evidence and the many theoretical refinements it proposes, the book significantly advances one of today's most
lively research paradigms.'
Jean-Philippe Deranty, Macquarie University, Australia
'While it is broadly recognized that social movement action goes beyond the defence of specific interests, the moral dimensiolÃ+
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