R&L Logo R&L Logo
  • GENERAL
    • Browse by Subjects
    • New Releases
    • Coming Soon
    • Chases's Calendar
  • ACADEMIC
    • Textbooks
    • Browse by Course
    • Instructor's Copies
    • Monographs & Research
    • Reference
  • PROFESSIONAL
    • Education
    • Intelligence & Security
    • Library Services
    • Business & Leadership
    • Museum Studies
    • Music
    • Pastoral Resources
    • Psychotherapy
  • FREUD SET
Cover Image
Paperback
eBook
share of facebook share on twitter
Add to GoodReads Exam Copies

The 2012 Presidential Campaign

A Communication Perspective

Edited by Robert E. Denton Jr. - Contributions by Henry C. Kenski; Kate M. Kenski; Rachel Holloway; Ben Voth; Craig Allen Smith; John C. Tedesco; Scott W. Dunn; Gwen Brown; Jeffrey P. Jones; John Allen Hendricks; Joseph M. Valenzano III and Jason A. Edwards

Presidential campaigns are our national conversations – the widespread and complex communication of issues, images, social reality, and personas. Political communication specialists break down the 2012 presidential campaign and go beyond the quantitative facts, electoral counts, and poll results of the election, to make sense of the “political bits” of communication that comprise our voting choices. The contributors look at the early campaign period, the nomination process and conventions, the social and political contexts, the debates, the role of candidate spouses, candidate strategies, political strategies, and the use of the Internet and other technologies.
  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 220 • Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-1674-7 • Paperback • July 2013 • $59.00 • (£45.00)
978-1-4422-1675-4 • eBook • July 2013 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
Series: Communication, Media, and Politics
Subjects: Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Language Arts & Disciplines / Communication Studies, Social Science / Media Studies, Political Science / American Government / Executive Branch
Robert E. Denton, Jr. holds the W. Thomas Rice Chair of Leadership Studies in the Pamplin College of Business and serves as head of the Department of Communication at Virginia Tech.
Preface
Chapter 1: The Presidential Nominating Conventions and the American Dream: Narrative Unity and Political Division. Rachel Holloway
Chapter 2: Change in the Communication Demands of Spouses in the 2012 Nominating Convention, Gwen Brown
Chapter 3: Presidential Debates 2012, Ben Voth
Chapter 4: “His to Lose”: Strategic Keys to Challenging the Incumbent in 2012, Craig Allen Smith
Chapter 5: Political Advertising in the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election, John C. Tedesco & Scott W. Dunn
Chapter 6: “Death by Taxes”: A Post-mortem on Romney’s Tax Return Apologia, Joseph M. Valenzano III & Jason A. Edwards
Chapter 7: Presidential Campaigns as Cultural Events: The Convergence of Politics and Popular Culture in Election 2012, Jeffrey P. Jones
Chapter 8: The New Media Campaign of 2012, John Allen Hendricks
Chapter 9: Explaining the Vote in the Election of 2008: Obama’s Re-election, Henry C. Kenski & Kate M. Kenski
Index
About the Contributors

This is a comprehensive analysis of Campaign 2012, from the growing political role of candidates’ wives, to the dysfunctional presidential debates, to Romney’s rhetorically challenged response to attacks, to the increasingly sophisticated use of social media. The volume is important reading for anyone who wants to stay current in presidential campaign communication.


— John H. Parmalee, professor and Chair, Department of Communication, University of North Florida, and author of Politics and the Twitter Revolution


By any measure the 2012 Presidential campaign was bound to be an unusual national spectacle. An African American President presiding over a struggling economy was vulnerable. The GOP foundered early in uncharacteristic disarray. And the interests of voters usually thought to be on the margins of the electorate—African Americans, Latinos, and younger women—would eventually converge to give Barack Obama a comfortable victory. Critical assessments of national campaigns always benefit from multiple voices and perspectives. In this perceptive collection, Robert E. Denton Jr. presides over a penetrating and original examination of these and other forces using his own slate of seasoned political scholars. The nine essays in The 2012 Presidential Campaign: A Communication Perspective match the readability of conventional journalistic narratives, but easily surpass them in providing critical insights on a host of presentational variables: the drama of the presidential debates, the surrogacy of the candidates’ spouses, social media magnifying various triumphs and gaffs, advertising offensives in a handful of states, and fateful rhetorical choices made by each side in the run-up to November 6th. Few accounts of the 2012 campaign have been so detailed and thorough in assessing the candidates’ messages.

— Gary C. Woodward, The College of New Jersey


Robert Denton has once again brought together a team of political communication scholars who apply a wide range of theories and methods to analyzing a presidential campaign. From traditional speeches by candidates and their wives to twitter reactions from citizens, every type of campaign communication is explored. Denton's observation in his introduction that the more presidential campaign communication changes, the more it remains the same is evident throughout each chapter's analysis. The need for apologia, the dominance of the American Dream in presidential rhetoric, complaints about debate formats and their limitations--both old and new--or increased reliance on negative advertising are not new themes in analyzing these quadrennial events. However, the authors demonstrate that context matters and that each plays out in some unique way in 2012.

— Diana B. Carlin, Saint Louis University, Professor Emerita


In his preface to The 2012 Presidential Campaign, Robert E. Denton reflects that he has edited a book on the presidential election for every campaign dating back to 1992. Each of these elections, he argues, was both unique and very much the same as preceding contests. The chapters selected for the 2012 iteration reflect that dialectic—the contributors both explore subject matter that is particular to this cycle and place the election in appropriate historical context. Some of the chapters are exemplary, most are useful, and as a collection the edited volume holds up nicely alongside its predecessors in Denton’s series.
— Presidential Studies Quarterly


The 2012 Presidential Campaign

A Communication Perspective

Cover Image
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Presidential campaigns are our national conversations – the widespread and complex communication of issues, images, social reality, and personas. Political communication specialists break down the 2012 presidential campaign and go beyond the quantitative facts, electoral counts, and poll results of the election, to make sense of the “political bits” of communication that comprise our voting choices. The contributors look at the early campaign period, the nomination process and conventions, the social and political contexts, the debates, the role of candidate spouses, candidate strategies, political strategies, and the use of the Internet and other technologies.
Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 220 • Trim: 6 x 9
    978-1-4422-1674-7 • Paperback • July 2013 • $59.00 • (£45.00)
    978-1-4422-1675-4 • eBook • July 2013 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
    Series: Communication, Media, and Politics
    Subjects: Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Language Arts & Disciplines / Communication Studies, Social Science / Media Studies, Political Science / American Government / Executive Branch
Author
Author
  • Robert E. Denton, Jr. holds the W. Thomas Rice Chair of Leadership Studies in the Pamplin College of Business and serves as head of the Department of Communication at Virginia Tech.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Preface
    Chapter 1: The Presidential Nominating Conventions and the American Dream: Narrative Unity and Political Division. Rachel Holloway
    Chapter 2: Change in the Communication Demands of Spouses in the 2012 Nominating Convention, Gwen Brown
    Chapter 3: Presidential Debates 2012, Ben Voth
    Chapter 4: “His to Lose”: Strategic Keys to Challenging the Incumbent in 2012, Craig Allen Smith
    Chapter 5: Political Advertising in the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election, John C. Tedesco & Scott W. Dunn
    Chapter 6: “Death by Taxes”: A Post-mortem on Romney’s Tax Return Apologia, Joseph M. Valenzano III & Jason A. Edwards
    Chapter 7: Presidential Campaigns as Cultural Events: The Convergence of Politics and Popular Culture in Election 2012, Jeffrey P. Jones
    Chapter 8: The New Media Campaign of 2012, John Allen Hendricks
    Chapter 9: Explaining the Vote in the Election of 2008: Obama’s Re-election, Henry C. Kenski & Kate M. Kenski
    Index
    About the Contributors

Reviews
Reviews
  • This is a comprehensive analysis of Campaign 2012, from the growing political role of candidates’ wives, to the dysfunctional presidential debates, to Romney’s rhetorically challenged response to attacks, to the increasingly sophisticated use of social media. The volume is important reading for anyone who wants to stay current in presidential campaign communication.


    — John H. Parmalee, professor and Chair, Department of Communication, University of North Florida, and author of Politics and the Twitter Revolution


    By any measure the 2012 Presidential campaign was bound to be an unusual national spectacle. An African American President presiding over a struggling economy was vulnerable. The GOP foundered early in uncharacteristic disarray. And the interests of voters usually thought to be on the margins of the electorate—African Americans, Latinos, and younger women—would eventually converge to give Barack Obama a comfortable victory. Critical assessments of national campaigns always benefit from multiple voices and perspectives. In this perceptive collection, Robert E. Denton Jr. presides over a penetrating and original examination of these and other forces using his own slate of seasoned political scholars. The nine essays in The 2012 Presidential Campaign: A Communication Perspective match the readability of conventional journalistic narratives, but easily surpass them in providing critical insights on a host of presentational variables: the drama of the presidential debates, the surrogacy of the candidates’ spouses, social media magnifying various triumphs and gaffs, advertising offensives in a handful of states, and fateful rhetorical choices made by each side in the run-up to November 6th. Few accounts of the 2012 campaign have been so detailed and thorough in assessing the candidates’ messages.

    — Gary C. Woodward, The College of New Jersey


    Robert Denton has once again brought together a team of political communication scholars who apply a wide range of theories and methods to analyzing a presidential campaign. From traditional speeches by candidates and their wives to twitter reactions from citizens, every type of campaign communication is explored. Denton's observation in his introduction that the more presidential campaign communication changes, the more it remains the same is evident throughout each chapter's analysis. The need for apologia, the dominance of the American Dream in presidential rhetoric, complaints about debate formats and their limitations--both old and new--or increased reliance on negative advertising are not new themes in analyzing these quadrennial events. However, the authors demonstrate that context matters and that each plays out in some unique way in 2012.

    — Diana B. Carlin, Saint Louis University, Professor Emerita


    In his preface to The 2012 Presidential Campaign, Robert E. Denton reflects that he has edited a book on the presidential election for every campaign dating back to 1992. Each of these elections, he argues, was both unique and very much the same as preceding contests. The chapters selected for the 2012 iteration reflect that dialectic—the contributors both explore subject matter that is particular to this cycle and place the election in appropriate historical context. Some of the chapters are exemplary, most are useful, and as a collection the edited volume holds up nicely alongside its predecessors in Denton’s series.
    — Presidential Studies Quarterly


ALSO AVAILABLE

  • Cover image for the book The Road to the White House 2024: The Politics of Presidential Elections, 12th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process, Tenth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Get Out the Vote: How to Increase Voter Turnout, 5th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Change and Continuity in the 2020 and 2022 Elections
  • Cover image for the book Evaluating Campaign Finance Oversight: An Assessment of the Federal Election Commission
  • Cover image for the book The Keys to the White House: A Surefire Guide to Predicting the Next President, 2008 Edition
  • Cover image for the book Manipulated: Inside the Cyberwar to Hijack Elections and Distort the Truth
  • Cover image for the book Primary Politics: Everything You Need to Know about How America Nominates Its Presidential Candidates, 2024 Presidential Election Edition
  • Cover image for the book Modern Political Campaigns: How Professionalism, Technology, and Speed Have Revolutionized Elections
  • Cover image for the book Modern Political Campaigns: How Professionalism, Technology, and Speed Have Revolutionized Elections, Second Edition
  • Cover image for the book The Red Ripple: The 2022 Midterm Elections and What They Mean for 2024
  • Cover image for the book A Return to Normalcy?: The 2020 Election that (Almost) Broke America
  • Cover image for the book Conventional Wisdom and American Elections: Exploding Myths, Exploring Misconceptions, Fourth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process, Ninth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Game Changers: How Dark Money and Super PACs Are Transforming U.S. Campaigns
  • Cover image for the book The Making of the Presidential Candidates 2024
  • Cover image for the book Financing the 2020 Election
  • Cover image for the book Is the Youth Vote Liberal?: Analyzing Attitudes Toward Business and Regulation
  • Cover image for the book Atlas of the 2020 Elections
  • Cover image for the book Political Campaigning in the U.S.: Managing the Chaos
  • Cover image for the book Warring Fictions: Left Populism and its Defining Myths
  • Cover image for the book Celebrities in American Elections: Case Studies in Celebrity Politics
  • Cover image for the book The 2020 Presidential Election in the South
  • Cover image for the book Trumped: The 2016 Election That Broke All the Rules
  • Cover image for the book Atlas of the 2016 Elections
  • Cover image for the book The Road to the White House 2024: The Politics of Presidential Elections, 12th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process, Tenth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Get Out the Vote: How to Increase Voter Turnout, 5th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Change and Continuity in the 2020 and 2022 Elections
  • Cover image for the book Evaluating Campaign Finance Oversight: An Assessment of the Federal Election Commission
  • Cover image for the book The Keys to the White House: A Surefire Guide to Predicting the Next President, 2008 Edition
  • Cover image for the book Manipulated: Inside the Cyberwar to Hijack Elections and Distort the Truth
  • Cover image for the book Primary Politics: Everything You Need to Know about How America Nominates Its Presidential Candidates, 2024 Presidential Election Edition
  • Cover image for the book Modern Political Campaigns: How Professionalism, Technology, and Speed Have Revolutionized Elections
  • Cover image for the book Modern Political Campaigns: How Professionalism, Technology, and Speed Have Revolutionized Elections, Second Edition
  • Cover image for the book The Red Ripple: The 2022 Midterm Elections and What They Mean for 2024
  • Cover image for the book A Return to Normalcy?: The 2020 Election that (Almost) Broke America
  • Cover image for the book Conventional Wisdom and American Elections: Exploding Myths, Exploring Misconceptions, Fourth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process, Ninth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Game Changers: How Dark Money and Super PACs Are Transforming U.S. Campaigns
  • Cover image for the book The Making of the Presidential Candidates 2024
  • Cover image for the book Financing the 2020 Election
  • Cover image for the book Is the Youth Vote Liberal?: Analyzing Attitudes Toward Business and Regulation
  • Cover image for the book Atlas of the 2020 Elections
  • Cover image for the book Political Campaigning in the U.S.: Managing the Chaos
  • Cover image for the book Warring Fictions: Left Populism and its Defining Myths
  • Cover image for the book Celebrities in American Elections: Case Studies in Celebrity Politics
  • Cover image for the book The 2020 Presidential Election in the South
  • Cover image for the book Trumped: The 2016 Election That Broke All the Rules
  • Cover image for the book Atlas of the 2016 Elections
facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon linked in icon NEWSLETTERS
ABOUT US
  • Mission Statement
  • Employment
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Statement
CONTACT
  • Company Directory
  • Publicity and Media Queries
  • Rights and Permissions
  • Textbook Resource Center
AUTHOR RESOURCES
  • Royalty Contact
  • Production Guidelines
  • Manuscript Submissions
ORDERING INFORMATION
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • National Book Network
  • Ingram Publisher Services UK
  • Special Sales
  • International Sales
  • eBook Partners
  • Digital Catalogs
IMPRINTS
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • Lexington Books
  • Hamilton Books
  • Applause Books
  • Amadeus Press
  • Backbeat Books
  • Bernan
  • Hal Leonard Books
  • Limelight Editions
  • Co-Publishing Partners
  • Globe Pequot
  • Down East Books
  • Falcon Guides
  • Gooseberry Patch
  • Lyons Press
  • Muddy Boots
  • Pineapple Press
  • TwoDot Books
  • Stackpole Books
PARTNERS
  • American Alliance of Museums
  • American Association for State and Local History
  • Brookings Institution Press
  • Center for Strategic & International Studies
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
  • Fortress Press
  • The Foundation for Critical Thinking
  • Lehigh University Press
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Other Partners...