Findings reveal the dominance of “confrontation” frames across agencies and countries, reinforcing research on conflict-driven news visuals in moments of democratic crisis.
16.12.2025 10:27
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Using visual analysis of 412 news images, the study examines how agency photographs frame democratic breakdown through lenses of agency, action, and conflict across two national contexts.
16.12.2025 10:27
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Findings show that visual attention matters for high-threshold participation (e.g. purchase intentions), while low-threshold actions (likes, shares) depend more on issue involvement—offering key insights for designing effective political social media campaigns.
16.12.2025 10:25
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Grounded in the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM), the study examines how involvement levels, image types, and source cues shape users’ attention and responses to mobilizing political posts.
16.12.2025 10:25
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The article shows how the presence or absence of art contributes to meanings of place, revealing how cultural regeneration can also produce exclusion and marginalization when cities fail to enter a truly transindustrial phase.
15.12.2025 12:50
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Using explorative walking in deindustrialized urban spaces, the study compares places transformed by art with neighbouring areas where art—and industrial memory—is absent.
15.12.2025 12:50
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The findings reveal shifting visual grammars—especially after the rollout of vaccines—and expose forms of visual ageism. The article calls for more nuanced and diverse representations of elderhood in political and media communication.
15.12.2025 12:47
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Drawing on visual content analysis of Der Spiegel and Die Apothekenumschau, the study explores how pandemic imagery shaped discourses on age, vulnerability, power, and governance in Germany.
15.12.2025 12:47
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The ICA review deadline is now Dec 12.
If you’re able to submit your #PolComm reviews ahead of the new deadline, it would greatly help us keep the process running smoothly.
Thanks so much for your time and commitment! 💙
08.12.2025 14:59
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Vigsø argues that while stickers offer strong communicative potential, they also create “rhetorical liabilities” that make them strategically risky for parties.
A key contribution to understanding political communication and semiotic practices.
09.12.2025 14:45
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The article analyses the mediacy and rhetorical affordances of stickers—highly flexible, visual, tactile, and usable almost anywhere—yet largely untouched by political parties.
09.12.2025 14:45
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Building on recent scholarship viewing stickers as a contemporary form of street art, the article highlights how they multimodally express sociocultural and political–economic issues, offering a democratic form of public communication.
09.12.2025 14:42
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The study explores stickers as ephemeral, mobile signs appearing across everyday spaces—from lampposts to laptops—where they convey political, regulatory, commercial and artistic meanings.
09.12.2025 14:42
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Findings highlight stickers as a distinct medium in linguistic landscapes—using typefaces, graphic citations and visual strategies to express social tensions and urban self-representation.
08.12.2025 19:07
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Using a mixed-method approach, the study explores stickers on politics, football and place identity across the Ruhr Area, revealing how typographic and graphic choices convey ideology, mark territory and build local identity.
08.12.2025 19:07
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Using a multimodal social semiotic approach, the article shows how environmental activists use stickers to voice concerns, mobilize support and reshape the semiotic landscape—turning local resistance into a visible global message.
05.12.2025 10:12
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Once a small rural village, Lützerath became globally symbolic in Germany’s climate debate as activists opposed its excavation by energy giant RWE.
This study examines its stickerscape as a dynamic, bottom-up communicative practice in public space.
05.12.2025 10:12
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Drawing on chronotopes, social semiotics and stance-taking theory, the study analyses stickered laptops and student questionnaires from Switzerland and Germany. It shows how stickers signal identity, community and political positions—shaped by the mobility of laptops.
04.12.2025 14:48
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Unlike unauthorized stickers in public space, laptop stickering is tied to personal devices, creating a distinct genre shaped by mobility, materiality, and affiliation. As laptops move through different contexts, sticker meanings shift and gain new indexical value.
04.12.2025 14:48
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Taking a stance with laptop stickers | Intellect
The article explores the semiotic practice of using laptop stickers as a means of social, cultural and political stance-taking. To shed light on this communicative practice, it discusses the mobility ...
📢 New Article in JVPC’s Special Issue “Self-Authorized Discourses: The Case of Stickers”!
“Taking a stance with laptop stickers” by Cornelia F. Bock & Florian Busch examines how laptop stickers visually express social, cultural and political stances.
DOI: doi.org/10.1386/jvpc...
04.12.2025 14:48
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