Fragmentation and Polarization of the Public Sphere in the 2000s: Evidence from Italy and Russia

Authors

  • Svetlana S. Bodrunova St. Petersburg State University

Keywords:

Public counter-sphere, Italy, Russia, mediacracy, democratic quality of communication, fragmentation, public sphere

Abstract

After the Arab spring, direct linkage between growth of technological hybridization of media systems and political online-to-offline protest spill-overs seemed evident, at least in several aspects, as ‘twitter revolutions’ showed organizational potential of the mediated communication of today. But in de-facto politically transitional countries hybridization of media systems is capable of performing not just organizational but also ‘cultivational’ roles in terms of creating communicative milieus where protest consensus is formed, provoking spill-overs from expressing political opinions online to street protest.The two cases of Italy and Russia are discussed in terms of their non-finished process of transition to democracy and the media’s role within the recent political process. In the two cases, media-political conditions have called into being major cleavages in national deliberative space that may be conceptualized like formation of nation-wide public counter-spheres based upon alternative agenda and new means of communication. The structure and features of these counter-spheres are reconstructed; to check whether regional specifics are involved into the formation of this growing social gap, quantitative analysis of regional online news media (website menus) is conducted. Several indicators for spotting the formation of counter-spheres and criteria for further estimation of democratic quality of such counter-spheres are suggested.

Author Biography

Svetlana S. Bodrunova, St. Petersburg State University

Dr Svetlana S. Bodrunova, PhD in Political Science, is currently Chair of the Department of Media Design and IT for Media at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, St. Petersburg State University, and Senior Research Fellow at the Internet Studies Lab of the Higher School of Economics in St. Petersburg, Russia. She has authored two monographs on modern media & politics in the UK and Italy, as well as co-edited and co-authored ‘Mediacracy: today’s theories and practices’ volume (2013).

Downloads

How to Cite

Bodrunova, S. (2013). Fragmentation and Polarization of the Public Sphere in the 2000s: Evidence from Italy and Russia. Global Media Journal - German Edition, 3(1). Retrieved from https://globalmediajournal.de/index.php/gmj/article/view/103