The spiral of silence :
Noelle-Neumann, Elisabeth, 1916-2010
The spiral of silence : public opinion, our social skin / Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann. - 2nd ed. - Chicago ; London : University of Chicago Press, c1993. - 269 p. : ill. b&w ; 22 cm.
Includes bibliography (p. 245-261) and index.
1. The hypothesis of silence --
2. Testing with survey research --
3. Fear of isolation as a motive --
4. Public opinion: what is it? --
5. The law of opinion: John Locke --
6. Government rests on opinion: David Hume, James Madison --
7. Launching the term "public opinion": Jean-Jacques Rousseau --
8. Public opinion as tiranny: Alexis de Tocqueville --
9. The concept of "social control" is formed and the concept of "public opinion" is shattered --
10. The howling chorus of wolves --
11. Public opinion among African and Pacific tribes --
12. Storming the Bastille: public opinion and mass psychology. -- 13. Fashion is public opinion --
14. The pillory --
15. The law and public opinion --
16. Public opinion creates integration --
17. Avant-garde, heretics and outsiders: challenging public opinion --
18. The stereotype as a vehicle for spreading public opinion: Walter Lippman --
19. Public opinion selects the issues: Niklas Luhmann --
20. The journalist's privilege: conferring public attention --
21. Public opinion has two sources: one, the mass media --
22. The dual climate of public opinion --
23. The articulation function: those whose point of view is not represented by the media are effectively mute --
24. Vox populi-vox dei --
25. New discoveries --
26. Toward a theory of public opinion --
27. The manifest and latent functions of public opinion: a summary.
Examines public opinion as a form of social control in which individuals, almost instinctively sensing the opinions of those around them, shape their behavior to prevailing attitudes about what is acceptable.
Translated from German.
9780226589367
Public opinion--Germany (West)
303.38
The spiral of silence : public opinion, our social skin / Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann. - 2nd ed. - Chicago ; London : University of Chicago Press, c1993. - 269 p. : ill. b&w ; 22 cm.
Includes bibliography (p. 245-261) and index.
1. The hypothesis of silence --
2. Testing with survey research --
3. Fear of isolation as a motive --
4. Public opinion: what is it? --
5. The law of opinion: John Locke --
6. Government rests on opinion: David Hume, James Madison --
7. Launching the term "public opinion": Jean-Jacques Rousseau --
8. Public opinion as tiranny: Alexis de Tocqueville --
9. The concept of "social control" is formed and the concept of "public opinion" is shattered --
10. The howling chorus of wolves --
11. Public opinion among African and Pacific tribes --
12. Storming the Bastille: public opinion and mass psychology. -- 13. Fashion is public opinion --
14. The pillory --
15. The law and public opinion --
16. Public opinion creates integration --
17. Avant-garde, heretics and outsiders: challenging public opinion --
18. The stereotype as a vehicle for spreading public opinion: Walter Lippman --
19. Public opinion selects the issues: Niklas Luhmann --
20. The journalist's privilege: conferring public attention --
21. Public opinion has two sources: one, the mass media --
22. The dual climate of public opinion --
23. The articulation function: those whose point of view is not represented by the media are effectively mute --
24. Vox populi-vox dei --
25. New discoveries --
26. Toward a theory of public opinion --
27. The manifest and latent functions of public opinion: a summary.
Examines public opinion as a form of social control in which individuals, almost instinctively sensing the opinions of those around them, shape their behavior to prevailing attitudes about what is acceptable.
Translated from German.
9780226589367
Public opinion--Germany (West)
303.38
