Post-truth politics, also described as post-factual politics[1] or post-reality politics,[2] amidst varying academic and dictionary definitions of the term, refer to a recent historical period where political culture is marked by public anxiety about what claims can be publicly accepted facts.[3][4][5]

People's Vote

It suggests that the public (not scientific or philosophical) distinction between truth and falsity—as well as honesty and lying—have become a focal concern of public life, and are viewed by popular commentators and academic researchers alike as having a consequential role in how politics operates in the early 21st century. It is regarded as especially being influenced by the arrival of new communication and media technologies.[6][4][7] Popularized as a term in news media and a dictionary definition, post-truth has developed from a short-hand label for the abundance and influence of misleading or false political claims into a concept empirically studied and theorized by academic research. Oxford Dictionaries declared that its international word of the year in 2016 was "post-truth", citing a 20-fold increase in usage compared to 2015, and noted that it was commonly associated with the noun "post-truth politics".[8]

Since post-truth politics are primarily known through public statements in specific media contexts (such as commentary on major broadcasting networks, podcasts, YouTube videos, and social media), it is especially studied as a media and communication studies phenomenon with particular forms of truth-telling, including intentional rumors, lies, conspiracy theories, and fake news.[4][7][9][6] In the context of media and politics, it often involves the manipulation of information or the spread of misinformation to shape public perceptions and advance political agendas. Deceptive communication, "disinformation, rumor bombs, and fake news have mass communication era antecedents in both war and security (gray propaganda) and commercial communication (advertising and public relations). All can be said to be forms of strategic communication and not mere accidental or innocent misstatements of facts." Deceptive political communication is timeless.[10]

However, distrust in major social institutions, political parties, government, news media, and social media, along with the fact that anyone today can create and circulate content that has generic characteristics of news (fake news) creates the conditions for post-truth politics.[11][12][13][14] Distrust is also politically polarized, where those identifying with one political party dislike and don't trust those of another. Distrust becomes the bearer of post-truth politics, since citizens cannot at first-hand verify claims about things happening in the world and don't usually have expert knowledge about subjects being reported factually; they are faced with the choice of trusting news providers and other public truth-tellers. For this reason, some scholars have argued that post-truth does not at all refer to a sense that facts are irrelevant but to a public anxiety about the status of publicly accepted facts on which democracy can function.[15][3]

As of 2018, political commentators and academic researchers have identified post-truth politics as ascendant in many nations, notably Australia, Brazil, India, Ghana, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States, among others.

History of terminology

edit

The term post-truth politics appears to have developed from other adjectival uses of "post-truth", such as "post-truth political environment", "post-truth world", "post-truth era", "post-truth society", and very close cousins, such as "post-fact society" and "post-truth presidency". According to Oxford Dictionaries, the Serbian-American playwright Steve Tesich may have been the first to use the term post-truth in a 1992 essay in The Nation. Tesich writes that following the shameful truth of Watergate (1972–1974), more assuaging coverage of the Iran–Contra scandal (1985–1987)[16] and Persian Gulf War (1990–1991) demonstrates that "we, as a free people, have freely decided that we want to live in some post-truth world."[17][18] However, as Harsin (2018) notes, the term was in academic circulation in the 1990s. The media studies scholar John Hartley used the term "post-truth as the title of a chapter, "Journalism in a Post-truth Society", in his 1992 book The Politics of Pictures.[4][19]

In 2004 Ralph Keyes used the term "post-truth era" in his book by that title.[20] In it he argued that deception is becoming more prevalent in the current media-driven world. According to Keyes, lies stopped being treated as something inexcusable and started being viewed as something acceptable in certain situations, which supposedly led to the beginning of the post-truth era. The same year American journalist Eric Alterman spoke of a "post-truth political environment" and coined the term "the post-truth presidency" in his analysis of the misleading statements made by the Bush administration after 9/11 in 2001.[21] More specifically, the American academic Moustafa Bayoumi argued that it was the 2003 "Iraq War that ushered in the post-truth era and that the United States is to blame". Bayoumi believes that there existed differences compared to the times, for example, of the Spanish–American War and of the Gulf of Tonkin incident. Starting from 2002-2003, through the formation of the Office of Special Plans and supported by the neocons' noble lie ideology, the greatest difference from previous time periods of all existed and "the apparatus of lying became institutionalized".[22] In his 2004 book Post-democracy, Colin Crouch used the term post-democracy to mean a model of politics where "elections certainly exist and can change governments", but "public electoral debate is a tightly controlled spectacle, managed by rival teams of professionals expert in the techniques of persuasion, and considering a small range of issues selected by those teams". Crouch directly attributes the "advertising industry model" of political communication to the crisis of trust and accusations of dishonesty that a few years later others have associated with post-truth politics.[23] More recently, scholars have followed Crouch in demonstrating the role of professional political communication's contribution to distrust and wrong beliefs, where strategic use of emotion is becoming key to gaining trust for truth statements.[24]

The term "post-truth politics" may have originally been coined by the blogger David Roberts in a blog post for Grist on 1 April 2010. Roberts defined it as "a political culture in which politics (public opinion and media narratives) have become almost entirely disconnected from policy (the substance of legislation)".[25][26] Post truth was used by philosopher Joseph Heath to describe the 2014 Ontario election.[27] The term became widespread during the campaigns for the 2016 presidential election in the United States and for the 2016 "Brexit" referendum on membership in the European Union in the United Kingdom.[28][29][30] Following this, some scholars use the term "post-truth situation" to refer to such "a situation in society and politics, in which the boundary between truth and untruth is erased, facts and related narratives are purposefully produced, emotions are more important than knowledge and the actors of social or political life do not care for truth, proof and evidence".[31]

Concepts

edit

Information disorder has been proposed as an umbrella term for the wide variety of poor or false information being used for political purposes in post-truth politics.[32]

Post-truth

edit

Scholars and popular commentators disagree about whether post-truth is a label that is newly generated but can be applied to phenomena such as lying in any historical period; or whether it is historically specific, with empirically more recent observable causes (especially new social and political relations enabled by new digital communication technologies) and is only simplistically reduced to the age-old phenomenon of political lying. Scholars and popular commentators also disagree about the degree to which emotion should be emphasized in theories of post-truth, despite the emphasis on emotion in the Oxford Dictionary's original definition of the word.[4] While the term "post-truth" had no dictionary entry before Oxford Dictionaries' entry in 2016, the Oxford entry[30] was inspired by the outcomes of the Brexit referendum and the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign; it was thus already implicitly referring to politics. Further, in the original Oxford Dictionaries' entry's (even today, more of a press release than traditional dictionary entry) justification for their choice, they say that it is often used in noun form of "post-truth politics". Thus, post-truth is often used interchangeably with post-truth politics.[30]

Post-truth politics is a subset of the broader term post-truth, whose use precedes the recent focus on political events. While Oxford Dictionaries influentially named post-truth its 2016 word-of-the-year, current academic development of post-truth as a concept does not entirely reflect their original emphasis on "circumstances" where appeals to "objective facts" fail to influence as much as "appeals to emotion and personal belief" (see "Drivers" section below).[33] The use of post-truth communication as a major tool in political campaigns such as the Brexit debate in the UK and the Trump campaign in the United States resulted in intense scholarly and journalistic interest in it as an aspect of politics.[34][35] The existence of "post-truth politics" as a concept that makes sense and as a problem in the political life of liberal democracies is sometimes denied by critics.[36][35]

Some uses of the concept are more general, referring not to historical conditions of widely empirically documented distrust or a context of promotional capitalism, easily accessible and hard-to-control amateur mass communication of social media, but to the presence of lying and distrust in politics and bias in journalism (and commentators' opinions that people of the day were distrustful or that political lying was common). Reducing the concept of post-truth to dishonest political communication and different styles thereof, some scholars argue that what one identifies as post-truth politics today is really a return of previous periods of politics. Some argue that what is being called "post-truth" is a return to 18th- and 19th-century political and media practices in the United States, followed by a period in the 20th century where the media was relatively balanced and political rhetoric was toned down.[37] Such a view nonetheless also conflicts with those in other countries at other times. For example, in 1957 scientist Kathleen Lonsdale remarked in the British context that "for many people truthfulness in politics has now become a mockery.... Anyone who listens to the radio in a mixed company of thinking people knows how deep-seated is this cynicism."[38] Similarly, New Scientist characterised the pamphlet wars that arose with the growth of printing and literacy, beginning in the 1600s, as an early form of post-truth politics. Slanderous and vitriolic pamphlets were cheaply printed and widely disseminated, and the dissent that they fomented contributed to starting wars and revolutions such as the English Civil War (1642–1652) and (much later) the American Revolution (1765–1791).[39]

Drivers

edit

Communication and media scholars and philosophers tend to view the definition, origins, and causes of post-truth slightly differently. Media and communication scholars emphasize the historical revolution in communication technologies, which has fundamentally altered social life, including ways of knowing socially (social epistemology), shared authorities, and trust in institutions. Some also do not see post-truth as primarily a problem of knowledge, but rather of confusion, disorientation, and distrust. Philosophers tend to cite media and communications changes but claim that academic movements themselves, such as postmodernism, have influenced society, resulting in a situation where feeling and belief create an epistemic crisis for politics.[35] Scholars in the field of science and technology studies (STS) have studied post-truth as part of the evolution of knowledge society, and as shifts to long-standing roles of scientific truth-telling in public and political arenas.[40]

The "circumstances" surrounding post-truth (politics) noted by the original Oxford Dictionaries' definition have been expanded to denote a historical period, defined by the convergence of numerous empirically documented shifts. As opposed to early commentators who described it as a long-standing part of political life that was less notable before the advent of the Internet and related social changes, several scholars point to a host of empirical changes that are contemporary and are the core of the concept. For these scholars, post-truth differs from traditional contesting and falsifying of facts in public life by pointing to a cultural and historical convergence of several developments:

  1. An abundance of competing truth claims, partly due to accessible technologies of communication production, personal websites, videos, micro-blogging, and chat groups;
  2. A lack of shared authorities for adjudicating truth claims, especially with the demise of traditional journalism as a gatekeeper of issues and public truth claims;
  3. A fragmented public space, facilitated by algorithms, where truth claims appear unchallenged or unexamined by a larger public in attendance to them, sometimes associated with false knowledge effects of echo chambers and filter bubbles;
  4. A well-resourced influence or persuasive industry in public relations, marketing, advertising, and big data analytics, whose goals are especially to influence, not inform or educate;
  5. A cultural backdrop of "promotional culture", characterized by self-promoting, self-branding, user-generated content, about image as much as truth;
  6. A resorting to emotion and cognitive bias as a means to practically deal with the competition and confusion;
  7. A far-reaching context of social distrust to which post-truth political communication contribute and are affected by;
  8. Communication technologies corresponding to a culture of acceleration, distraction, and "hot cognition; and, perhaps, changing historical ethics about how much misleading or "spin" is acceptable.[4][6][7][41][42][43][44][45]

Before "post-truth" entered the Oxford Dictionary, in 2015, "regime of post-truth" entered the academic conceptual vocabulary.[9] "Regime of post-truth" instead of merely "post-truth politics" refers to a way of governing, with professional pan-partisan political communication manipulating the communication competitively in a context where institutions and discourses (such as science and news media) were formerly interdependent on one another to stabilize the public circulation of truth.[46] The concept refers to a convergent set of historical developments that have created the conditions of post-truth society and its politics: the political communication informed by cognitive science, which aims at managing perception and belief of segmented populations through techniques like microtargeting, which includes the strategic use of rumors and falsehoods;[47][48] the fragmentation of modern, more centralized mass news media gatekeepers, which have largely repeated one another's scoops and their reports;[49][50] the attention economy marked by information overload and acceleration, user-generated content and fewer society-wide common trusted authorities to distinguish between truth and lies, accurate and inaccurate;[51][52] the algorithms which govern what appears in social media and search engine rankings, based on what users want (per algorithm) and not on what is factual; and news[53] media which have been marred by scandals of plagiarism, hoaxes, propaganda, and changing news values. These developments have occurred on the background of economic crises, downsizing and favoring trends toward more traditional tabloid stories and styles of reporting, known as tabloidization[54] and infotainment.[55] In this view, post-truth cannot be understood without regard for the revolution in communication technologies and social life, their effects on cognition (the way people are disposed to think online),[56][44] in a backdrop of social acceleration.[57] In terms of entertainment, some scholars argue that citizens' orientations towards politics are dispositions formed first as audiences in relation to entertainment forms such as reality television, which can be shown to be transposable to their evaluation of political communication.[53][58][59] The concept of regime of post-truth has been expanded by other scholars to a geo-political level, analyzing political communication cases in the non-Western as well as Western world.[7]

While some of these phenomena (such as a more tabloidesque press) may suggest a return to the past, the effect of the convergences is a socio-political phenomenon which exceeds earlier forms of journalism in deliberate distortion, error, and cultural confusion. Fact-checking and rumor-busting sites abound, but they are unable to reunite a fragmented set of audiences (attention-wise) and their respective trustful-/distrustfulness.

Other scholars, such as the philosopher Lee McIntyre (2018), who focuses on "post-truth" generally and not politics specifically, argue that rising social distrust of scientific expertise and postmodern academic discourse, allegedly promoting a devaluing of or disregard for truth, have combined with cognitive biases to produce conditions where feeling triumphs over facts. While several of these scholars cite distrust as an agent of post-truth social and political effects, the origin of the distrust is less clear. McIntyre sees public relations efforts to undermine scientific truths, on, for example, the effects of tobacco, as important factors (in addition to the alleged influence of academic postmodernism on conservative politics, though this link is not empirically established). As another specific example of corporate interests undermining truths for which there exists scientific consensus, McIntyre cites previous donations of BP to organizations which deny climate change.[35] However, public relations is just one part of a larger culture of promotionalism (consumer capitalism),[60] where truth has long been the last concern in strategies to influence people to feel positively or negatively towards brands as businesses, countries, products, parties, and politicians. Furthermore, the scandals in journalism around plagiarism and "cheerleading" for the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq,[61][62][22] combine with promotional culture, ethically questionable professional strategic political communication, potential viral mediascapes, algorithmically customized presentation of information, among other factors to reproduce various forms of specific and generalized distrust—trust being crucial for recognition of legitimate public truth-tellers.[48][58]

While many popular treatments of post-truth (sometimes used interchangeably with fake news) claim or imply a growth in political lying, several scholars see lying as only one feature of post-truth (which cannot historically distinguish it as new), instead focusing on problems of distinguishing true and false (common authorities for inducing belief being scarcer), or on disorientation, confusion, misperception, and distraction. Here post-truth is not synonymous with lying, fake news or other deception but is about a public anxiety that there is no confident way to secure publicly accepted facts in political culture.[63][3] The appeals to scientific expertise (though minority views in their fields), as with anti-vaccine supporters, demonstrates that across the board, people do in fact respect scientific experts, or the idea thereof. But science and expertise have been politicized, making it harder for the unknowing to identify legitimate authorities (all of whom may hold advanced degrees).[4][59] Furthermore, it may not be so much that post-truth is manifest trust in one's emotions before truth claims as one's identification of emotional truth-tellers as authentic, honest, and therefore trustworthy.[59]

Misinformation

edit

Misinformation is inadvertently false or misleading information used in political discourse. The term is also used as an umbrella term for any type of misinformation, disinformation, or fake news.[64]

Disinformation

edit

Disinformation is purposely and intentionally misleading information, for example, in propaganda.[64]

Fake news

edit

Fake news is "fabricated information that mimics news media content in form but not in organizational process or intent."[65][64]

Conspiracy theories

edit

Conspiracy theories are elaborate packages of interconnected assertions with respect to powerful conspirators which are typically characterized by improbability; however, actual political conspiracies such as the Watergate breakin and coverup do exist.[64]

Rumor bombs

edit

Across an interdisciplinary body of research, the core of rumor definitions is a statement that is not verifiably true or false.[66] The militaristic metaphor "rumor bomb," refers to a rumor that is strategically "dropped" to cause confusion, doubt, or dis-, mis-, belief.[67][68][69]

Vulnerability

edit

There are two aspects of vulnerability to misinformation: gullibility with respect to poorer information, and distrust and skepticism with respect to better information that might correct it.[64]

Manufactured controversy

edit

Political operatives in the post-truth space may fabricate controversies for economic or political advantage or, as in gaslighting, to disorient and confuse the public.

Description

edit
 
A Vote Leave poster with a contested claim about the EU membership fee, cited as an example of post-truth politics[70]

In modern professionalization of political communication (tied to marketing and advertising research), a defining trait of post-truth politics is that campaigners continue to repeat their talking points, even when media outlets, experts in the field in question, and others provide proof that contradicts these talking points.[71][72] For example, during campaigning for the British EU referendum campaign, Vote Leave made repeated use of the claim that EU membership cost £350 million a week, although later began to use the figure as a net amount of money sent directly to the EU. This figure, which ignored the UK rebate and other factors, was described as "potentially misleading" by the UK Statistics Authority, as "not sensible" by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and was rejected in fact checks by BBC News, Channel 4 News and Full Fact.[73][74][75] Vote Leave nevertheless continued to use the figure as a centrepiece of their campaign until the day of the referendum, after which point they downplayed the pledge as having been an "example", pointing out that it was only ever suggested as a possible alternative use of the net funds sent to the EU.[76] Tory MP and Leave campaigner Sarah Wollaston, who left the group in protest during its campaign, criticised its "post-truth politics".[70] The justice secretary Michael Gove controversially claimed in an interview that the British people "Had had enough of experts".[77]

Michael Deacon, parliamentary sketchwriter for The Daily Telegraph, summarised the core message of post-truth politics as "Facts are negative. Facts are pessimistic. Facts are unpatriotic." He added that post-truth politics can also include a claimed rejection of partisanship and negative campaigning.[78] In this context, campaigners can push a utopian "positive campaign" to which rebuttals can be dismissed as smears and scaremongering and opposition as partisan.[26][78]

In its most extreme mode, post-truth politics can make use of conspiracism.[79][80] In this form of post-truth politics, false rumors (such as the "birther" or "Muslim" conspiracy theories about Barack Obama) become major news topics.[81] In the case of the "pizzagate" conspiracy, this resulted in a man entering the Comet Ping Pong pizzeria and firing an AR-15 rifle.[82]

In contrast to simply telling untruths, writers such as Jack Holmes of Esquire describe the process as something different, with Holmes putting it as: "So, if you don't know what's true, you can say whatever you want and it's not a lie".[2] Finally, scholars have argued that post-truth is not simply about clear cut true/false statements and people's failure to distinguish between them but about strategically ambiguous statements that may be true in some ways, from some perspectives and interpretations, and false in others. This was the case around the disinformation campaigns of the UK and US in promoting the US invasion of Iraq (Saddam Hussein/Al Qaeda "ties" or "links" and Weapons of Mass Destruction), which have been described as watershed moments of the post-truth era.[83][48][21]

Major news outlets

edit
 
Decline of neutrality and rise in emotionality in large U.S. media news articles headlines since 2000[84]

Several trends in the media landscape have been blamed for the perceived rise of post-truth politics. One contributing factor has been the proliferation of state-funded news agencies like CCTV News and RT, and Voice of America in the US which allow states to influence Western audiences. According to Peter Pomerantsev, a British-Russian journalist who worked for TNT in Moscow, one of their prime objectives has been to de-legitimize Western institutions, including the structures of government, democracy, and human rights.[citation needed] As of 2016, trust in the mainstream media in the US had reached historical lows.[29] It has been suggested that under these conditions, fact checking by news outlets struggles to gain traction among the wider public[29][85] and that politicians resort to increasingly drastic messaging.[86]

Many news outlets desire to appear to be, or have a policy of being, impartial. Many writers have noted that in some cases, this leads to false balance, the practice of giving equal emphasis to unsupported or discredited claims without challenging their factual basis.[87] The 24-hour news cycle also means that news channels repeatedly draw on the same public figures, which benefits PR-savvy politicians and means that presentation and personality can have a larger impact on the audience than facts,[88] while the process of claim and counter-claim can provide grist for days of news coverage at the expense of deeper analysis of the case.[89]

Social media and the Internet

edit

General availability of vast amounts of information on the internet bypassed established media that were generally reliable due to editorial process and professional journalistic and academic discipline which acted as gatekeepers which filtered out misinformation. Now misinformation that might have been filtered out is often published in popular globally accessible forums which enter the marketplace of ideas liberal democracies depend on for informing their electorate.[64]

Social media adds an additional dimension, as user networks can become echo chambers possibly emphasised by the filter bubble where one political viewpoint dominates and scrutiny of claims fails,[89][39][90] allowing a parallel media ecosystem of websites, publishers and news channels to develop, which can repeat post-truth claims without rebuttal.[91] In this environment, post-truth campaigns can ignore fact checks or dismiss them as being motivated by bias.[80] The Guardian editor-in-chief Katherine Viner laid some of the blame on the rise of clickbait, articles of dubious factual content with a misleading headline and which are designed to be widely shared, saying that "chasing down cheap clicks at the expense of accuracy and veracity" undermines the value of journalism and truth.[92] In 2016, David Mikkelson, co-founder of the fact checking and debunking site Snopes.com, described the introduction of social media and fake news sites as a turning point, saying "I'm not sure I'd call it a post-truth age but ... there's been an opening of the sluice-gate and everything is pouring through. The bilge keeps coming faster than you can pump."[93]

The digital culture allows anybody with a computer and access to the internet to post their opinions online and mark them as fact which may become legitimized through echo-chambers and other users validating one another. Content may be judged based on how many views a post gets, creating an atmosphere that appeals to emotion, audience biases, or headline appeal instead of researched fact. Content which gets more views is continually filtered around different internet circles[clarification needed], regardless of its legitimacy. Some also argue that the abundance of fact available at any time on the internet leads to an attitude focused on knowing basic claims to information instead of an underlying truth or formulating carefully thought-out opinions.[94] The Internet allows people to choose where they get their information, often facilitating them to reinforce their own opinions.[95]

Researchers have developed prototypical falsity scores for over 800 contemporary elites on Twitter and associated exposure scores. Various similar countermeasures that are largely based on technical changes or extensions to common platforms and software have been proposed (see below).[96][97]

In 2017, a rise in national protests sparked against the 2016 United States presidential election and the victory of Donald Trump attributed to the fake news stories posted and shared by millions of users on Facebook. Following this incident, the spread of misinformation was given the word "post-truth", a term coined from Oxford Dictionaries as the "word of the year".[98]

Polarized political culture

edit

The rise of post-truth politics coincides with polarized political beliefs.[99] A Pew Research Center study of American adults found that "those with the most consistent ideological views on the left and right have information streams that are distinct from those of individuals with more mixed political views—and very distinct from each other".[100] Data is becoming increasingly accessible as new technologies are introduced to the everyday lives of citizens. An obsession for data and statistics also filters into the political scene, and political debates and speeches become filled with snippets of information that may be misconstrued, false, or not contain the whole picture. Sensationalized television news emphasizes grand statements and further publicizes politicians. This shaping from the media influences how the public views political issues and candidates.[95]

Origin

edit

Post-truth politics has its origins in the reaction of sectors of the public to widespread adoption of neoliberalism and other proposed global solutions to problems such as climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic[101] by global economic and political elites.[102][103][104][99]

In Six Faces of Globalization: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Why It Matters, a book by Anthea Roberts and Nicolas Lamp, two Australian scholars, the establishment neoliberal narrative and major reactions to it such as the "left-wing populist narrative", the "corporate power narrative", the "right-wing populist narrative", the "geoeconomic narrative" and a number of "global threats narratives" are compared and contrasted.[105]

The establishment narrative supported by consensus of democratic political parties and institutions such as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) is based on international negotiation of agreements allowing the economic principles of competition and comparative advantage to operate, maximizing gross domestic product (GDP) in each country. The principles employed are well established and work, producing expanded global economic production, but also result in gains for some sectors of the international economy and losses for others.[105]

Dissenting views

edit

Unlike some academic treatments of post-truth that see it as historically specific and closely associated with shifts in journalism, social trust, and new media and communication technologies, several popular commentators (pundits and journalists), equating post-truth with lying or sensational news, have proposed that post-truth is an imprecise or misleading term and/or should be abandoned. In an editorial, New Scientist suggested "a cynic might wonder if politicians are actually any more dishonest than they used to be", and hypothesized that "fibs once whispered into select ears are now overheard by everyone".[39] David Helfand argues, following Edward M. Harris, that "public prevarication is nothing new" and that it is the "knowledge of the audience" and the "limits of plausibility" within a technology-saturated environment that have changed. We are, rather, in an age of misinformation where such limits of plausibility have vanished and where everyone feels equally qualified to make claims that are easily shared and propagated.[106] The writer George Gillett has suggested that the term "post-truth" mistakenly conflates empirical and ethical judgements, writing that the supposedly "post-truth" movement is in fact a rebellion against "expert economic opinion becoming a surrogate for values-based political judgements".[107]

Toby Young, writing for The Spectator, called the term a "cliché" used selectively primarily by left-wing commentators to attack what are actually universal ideological biases, contending that "[w]e are all post-truthers and probably always have been".[108] The Economist has called this argument "complacent", however, identifying a qualitative difference between political scandals of previous generations, such as those surrounding the Suez Crisis and the Iran–Contra affair (which involved attempting to cover-up the truth) and contemporary ones in which public facts are simply ignored.[109] Similarly, Alexios Mantzarlis of the Poynter Institute said that political lies were not new and identified several political campaigns in history which would now be described as "post-truth". For Mantzarlis, the "post-truth" label was—to some extent—a "coping mechanism for commentators reacting to attacks on not just any facts, but on those central to their belief system", but also noted that 2016 had been "an acrimonious year for politics on both sides of the Atlantic".[110] Mantzarlis also noted that interest in fact checking had never been higher, suggesting that at least some reject "post-truth" politics.[110][111]

In addition, The Guardian's Kathryn Viner notes that while false news and propaganda are rampant, social media is a double-edged sword. While it has helped some untruths to spread, it has also restrained others; as an example, she said The Sun's false "The Truth" story following the Hillsborough disaster, and the associated police cover-up, would be hard to imagine in the social media age.[92]

By country

edit

Post-truth politics has been applied as a political buzzword to a wide range of political cultures; one article in The Economist identified post-truth politics in Austria, Germany, North Korea, Poland, Russia, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[109]

Australia

edit

The repeal of carbon pricing by the government of Tony Abbott was described as "the nadir of post-truth politics" by The Age.[112]

Germany

edit

In December 2016 "postfaktisch" (post-factual) was named word of the year by the Gesellschaft für deutsche Sprache (German language society), also in connection with a rise of right-wing populism[113] from 2015 on. Since the 1990s, "post-democracy" was used in sociology more and more.

Ghana

edit

In Ghana, Coker and Afriyie delved into the prevalence of post-truth politics in the Ghanaian context, with a specific focus on publications in print newspapers affiliated with the country's major political parties, the New Patriotic Party and the National Democratic Congress. The authors highlighted that post-truth practices have become ingrained in the fabric of election campaigns and political discourse in sub-Saharan Africa, including Ghana. Their research aimed to dissect the post-truth strategies employed by Ghanaian politicians affiliated with these two prominent parties, as manifested in their respective politically aligned newspapers, namely The Daily Statesman and The Enquirer. Coker and Afriyie identified three distinct strategies within this context, which they labeled as kairos, disinformation/misinformation, and the deliberate transmission of strategic falsehoods. These strategies were found to be actively shaping political narratives and public perceptions.[114]

India

edit

Amulya Gopalakrishnan, columnist for The Times of India, identified similarities between the Trump and Brexit campaigns on the one hand, and hot-button issues in India such as the Ishrat Jahan case and the ongoing case against Teesta Setalvad on the other, where accusations of forged evidence and historical revisionism have resulted in an "ideological impasse".[89]

Indonesia

edit

Post-truth politics have been discussed in Indonesia since at least 2016. In September 2016, the incumbent governor of Jakarta Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, during a speech to citizens of Thousand Islands, said that some citizens were being "deceived using Verse 51 of Al Maidah and other things", referring to a verse of the Quran used by his political opponents.[115] The video was later edited to omit a single word, misrepresenting his statement and instigating a political scandal that resulted in a blasphemy charge and two-year imprisonment.[116] Since this event, post-truth politics have played a more significant role in political campaigns, as well as interactions between Indonesian voters. Yoseph Wihartono, researcher in crimonology at the University of Indonesia, identified social media outlets and "internet mobbing" as sources of post-truth dynamics that have potentially "opened wide" the opportunity for religious populism to expand.[117]

South Africa

edit

Health care and education in South Africa was substantially compromised during the presidency of Thabo Mbeki due to his HIV/AIDS denialism.[118]

United Kingdom

edit

An early use of the phrase in British politics was in March 2012 by Scottish Labour MSP Iain Gray in criticising the difference between Scottish National Party's claims and official statistics.[119] Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy also described an undercurrent of post-truth politics in which people "cheerfully shot the messenger" when presented with facts that did not support their viewpoint, seeing it among pro-independence campaigners in the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, and Leave campaigners in the then-upcoming EU membership referendum.[120]

Post-truth politics has been retroactively identified in the lead-up to the Iraq War,[121] particularly after the Chilcot Report, published in July 2016, concluded that Tony Blair misrepresented military intelligence to support his view that Iraq's chemical weapons program was advanced.[122][123]

The phrase became widely used during the 2016 UK EU membership referendum to describe the Leave campaign.[28][29][121][70][124] Faisal Islam, political editor for Sky News, said that Michael Gove used "post-fact politics" that were imported from the Trump campaign; in particular, Gove's comment in an interview that "I think people in this country have had enough of experts..." was singled out as illustrative of a post-truth trend, although this is only part of a longer statement.[29][124][125] Similarly, Arron Banks, the founder of the unofficial Leave.EU campaign, said that "facts don't work ... You've got to connect with people emotionally. It's the Trump success."[78] Andrea Leadsom—a prominent campaigner for Leave in the EU referendum and one of the two final candidates in the Conservative leadership election—has been singled out as a post-truth politician,[78] especially after she denied having disparaged rival Theresa May's childlessness in an interview with The Times in spite of transcript evidence.[92]

United States

edit
Fact-checkers from The Washington Post,[126] the Toronto Star,[127] and CNN[128][129] compiled data on "false or misleading claims", and "false claims", respectively. The Post reported 30,573 false or misleading claims in four years,[126] an average of more than 20.9 per day.
To sow election doubt, Trump escalated use of "rigged election" and "election interference" statements in advance of the 2024 election compared to the previous two elections—the statements described as part of a "heads I win; tails you cheated" rhetorical strategy.[130]

In conjunction with the rise of new media and communication technologies (especially the Internet and blogging) and the professionalization of political communication (political consulting), scholars have viewed the periods following 9/11 and the George W. Bush administration's strategic communication as a seminal moment in the emergence of what has subsequently been called post-truth politics, before the term and concept exploded in public visibility in 2016. The Bush administration's talking points about "links" or "ties" between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda (repeated in parallel by the Tony Blair government), and Hussein's alleged possession of Weapons of Mass Destruction (both highly contested by experts at the time or later disproven and shown to be misleading) were viewed by some scholars[131][48][132] as part of a historical shift. Despite age-old precedents of political and government lying (such as the systematic lying by the U.S. government documented in The Pentagon Papers), these propaganda efforts were seen as more sophisticated in their organization and execution in a new media age, part of a complicated new public communication culture (between a wide number of cable and satellite TV, online, and legacy news media sources). In the U.S., the distrust and deception identified with strategic communication of Karl Rove, George W. Bush, and Donald Rumsfeld, among others, were a close historical precedent to controversies around truth (as accuracy and/or honesty) that entered the media agenda of U.S. public life, drawing significant news and new media attention and producing measurable confusion and false belief.[22] The most spectacular examples studied by scholars include the presidential candidacy of John Kerry in 2004 (accusations by the Republican consultant-directed "Swift boat Veterans for Truth" that he lied about his war record) and then, several years later (prior to the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign), that then candidate Barack Obama was a Muslim, despite his declaration that he was Christian, and was using a fake birth certificate (allegedly born in Kenya).[133][134][135]

In its original formulation, the phrase "post-truth politics" was used to describe the paradoxical situation in the United States where the Republican Party, which enforced stricter party discipline than the Democratic Party, was nevertheless able to present itself as more bipartisan, since individual Democrats were more likely to support Republican policies than vice versa.[26] The term was used by Paul Krugman in The New York Times to describe Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign in which certain claims—such as that Barack Obama had cut defense spending and that he had embarked on an "apology tour"—continued to be repeated long after they had been debunked.[136] Other forms of scientific denialism in modern US politics include the anti-vaxxer movement, and the belief that existing genetically modified foods are harmful[137] despite a strong scientific consensus that no currently marketed GMO foods have any negative health effects.[138] The health freedom movement in the US resulted in the passage of the bipartisan Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994, which allows the sale of dietary supplements without any evidence that they are safe or effective for the purposes consumers expect, though the FDA has begun regulation of homeopathic products.

In a review for the Harvard Gazette, Christopher Robichaud—a lecturer in ethics and public policy at Harvard Kennedy School—described conspiracy theories about the legitimacy of elections and politicians, such as the "birther" idea that Barack Obama is not a natural-born US citizen, as one side-effect of post-truth politics. Robichaud also contrasted the behavior of the candidates with that following the contested result of the 2000 election, in which Al Gore conceded and encouraged his supporters to accept the result of Bush v. Gore.[37] Similarly, Rob Boston, writing for The Humanist saw a rise in conspiracy theories across US public life, including Birtherism, climate change denialism, and rejecting evolution, which he identified as a result of post-truth politics, noting that the existence of extensive and widely available evidence against these conspiracy theories had not slowed their growth.[91]

In 2016, the "post-truth" label was especially widely used to describe the presidential campaign of Donald Trump, including by Professor Daniel W. Drezner in The Washington Post,[29] Jonathan Freedland in The Guardian,[28] Chris Cillizza in The Independent,[80] Jeet Heer in The New Republic,[139] and James Kirchick in the Los Angeles Times,[140] and by several professors of government and history at Harvard.[37] In 2017, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and others, began to point out lies or falsehoods in Trump's statements after the election.[141][142][143][144] Former president Barack Obama stated that the new media ecosystem "means everything is true and nothing is true".[145]

Political "facts"

edit

Newt Gingrich, a prominent American politician and Trump supporter, in an interview with CNN reporter Alisyn Camerota aired July 22, 2016, explained that facts based on the feelings of the electorate were more important in a political campaign than the statistics collected by a reliable government agency are:

  • "CAMEROTA: They feel it, yes, but the facts don't support it.
  • GINGRICH: As a political candidate, I'll go with how people feel and I'll let you go with the theoreticians."[146][147][35]

Supporters of those who are publishing or asserting things that are not true do not necessarily believe them, but have accepted that that is how the game is played.[148][149][150]

Environmental politics

edit

Although the consensus among scientists is that human activities contribute to global warming, several political parties around the world have made climate change denial a basis of their policies. These parties have been accused of using post-truth techniques to attack environmental measures meant to combat climate changes to benefit industry donors.[151] In the wake of the 2016 election, the United States saw numerous climate change deniers rise to power, such as new Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt replacing Barack Obama's appointee Gina McCarthy.

Solutions

edit

Political scientists Alfred Moore (University of York), Carlo Invernizzi-Accetti (City University of New York), Elizabeth Markovits (Mount Holyoke College), and Zeynep Pamuk (St John's College), evaluated American historian Sophia A. Rosenfeld's book, Democracy and Truth: A Short History (2019) and its potential solutions for dealing with post-truth politics, in what Invernizzi-Accetti calls "remedies for the growing split between populism and technocracy in contemporary democratic regimes".[152] Rosenfeld highlights seven potential solutions to the problem of post-truth politics: an ethical commitment to truth-telling and fact-checking in public; a proscription against reopening settled debates; a crackdown on disinformation by social media companies; a shift away from free-speech absolutism; protecting the integrity of political institutions; improving information literacy with education; and the support of nonviolent protest against lying and corruption.[153] Invernizzi-Accetti criticizes Rosenfeld's solutions, as he does not see the value of truth in politics. "Truth functions politically as a justification of authority", writes Invernizzi-Accetti, "whereas self-government is predicated on its exclusion from the political domain – it follows that any attempt to construe democracy as a 'regime of truth' is ultimately bound to contradict itself."[152] In response, Rosenfeld writes, "truth is bound always to be a problematic intrusion into any democracy", and that "skepticism is indeed intrinsic to democracy."[152] Alfred Moore responds to Rosenfeld's proposal noting that "solutions will not come from the better organization and communication of knowledge, whether popular or expert, nor from institutions and practices of competition and interaction between them, but from the generation of substantive relations of common interest and mutual commitment".[152]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Schwartz, Ian (28 November 2016). "George Will: "Post-Factual Politics" From Campaign Still Exists, Nixon More of a Statesman Than Current Leadership". RealClearPolitics.com. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b Holmes, Jack (26 September 2016). "Trump's Campaign Manager Offered Her Most Brilliant Defense Yet of Trump's Lies". Esquire. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Harsin, Jayson (29 December 2023). Re-thinking Mediations of Post-truth Politics and Trust: Globality, Culture, Affect. Taylor & Francis. pp. 1–33. ISBN 978-1-003-83593-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Harsin, Jayson (20 December 2018). "Post-Truth and Critical Communication Studies". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228613.013.757. ISBN 978-0-19-022861-3. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  5. ^ Farkas, Johan; Schou, Jannick (23 August 2019). Post-Truth, Fake News and Democracy: Mapping the Politics of Falsehood. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-50728-7.
  6. ^ a b c Kalpokas, Ignas (2018). A political theory of post-truth. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-97713-3. OCLC 1048428960.
  7. ^ a b c d Cosentino, Gabriele (2020). Social media and the post-truth world order: the global dynamics of disinformation. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-030-43005-4. OCLC 1145550288.
  8. ^ Flood, Alison (15 November 2016). "'Post-truth' named word of the year by Oxford Dictionaries". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  9. ^ a b Harsin, Jayson (24 February 2015). "Regimes of Posttruth, Postpolitics, and Attention Economies". Communication, Culture & Critique. 8 (2): 327–333. doi:10.1111/cccr.12097. ISSN 1753-9129.
  10. ^ Hesk, Jon (23 November 2000). Deception and Democracy in Classical Athens. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-42958-0.
  11. ^ "2023 Edelman Trust Barometer". Edelman. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  12. ^ Center, Pew Research (19 September 2023). "Public Trust in Government: 1958-2023". Pew Research Center - U.S. Politics & Policy. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  13. ^ Liedke, Jacob; Gottfried, Jeffrey (27 October 2022). "U.S. adults under 30 now trust information from social media almost as much as from national news outlets". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  14. ^ "Trust in institutions continues to fall in EU, despite declining unemployment and phasing out of pandemic restrictions | European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions". www.eurofound.europa.eu. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  15. ^ Bedorf, Thomas; Herrmann, Steffen K., eds. (2020). Political phenomenology: experience, ontology, episteme. Routledge research in phenomenology. New York London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-0-429-25985-2.
  16. ^ "The Iran-Contra Affair 30 Years Later: A Milestone in Post-Truth Politics". National Security Archive. 25 November 2016. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  17. ^ Flood, Alison (15 November 2016). "'Post-truth' named word of the year by Oxford Dictionaries". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
  18. ^ Kreitner, Richard (30 November 2016). "Post-Truth and Its Consequences: What a 25-Year-Old Essay Tells Us About the Current Moment". The Nation. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  19. ^ Hartley, John (1992). The politics of pictures: the creation of the public in the age of popular media. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-01541-3. OCLC 25130988.
  20. ^ Keyes, Ralph (2004). The Post-Truth Era: Dishonesty and Deception in Contemporary Life. New York: St. Martin's.
  21. ^ a b Alterman, Eric (2004). When Presidents Lie: A History of Official Deception and Its Consequences. New York: Viking. p. 305.
  22. ^ a b c Bayoumi, Moustafa (14 March 2023). "The Iraq war started the post-truth era. And America is to blame". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  23. ^ Crouch, Colin (2004). Post-democracy. Cambridge, UK: Polity. p. 4.
  24. ^ Harsin, Jayson (20 December 2018). "Post-Truth and Critical Communication Studies". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228613.013.757. ISBN 978-0-19-022861-3.
  25. ^ Tom Jeffery (26 June 2016). "Britain Needs More Democracy After the EU Referendum, Not Less". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  26. ^ a b c "Post-Truth Politics". Grist. 1 April 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  27. ^ "Transcript: Joseph Heath: Enough with All the Feelings". TVOntario. 25 June 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
  28. ^ a b c Jonathan Freedland (13 May 2016). "Post-truth politicians such as Donald Trump and Boris Johnson are no joke". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Daniel W. Drezner (16 June 2016). "Why the post-truth political era might be around for a while". The Washington Post. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  30. ^ a b c "Oxford Word of the Year 2016 | Oxford Languages". languages.oup.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  31. ^ Vacura, Miroslav (2020). "Emergence of the Post-truth Situation—Its Sources and Contexts". Disputatio. 9 (13). doi:10.5281/zenodo.3567162. ISSN 2254-0601.
  32. ^ Claire Wardle. "The Age of Information Disorder". datajournalism.com. Retrieved 3 November 2022. My frustration at the phrase led me to coin the term "information disorder" with my co-author Hossein Derakhshan
  33. ^ "Oxford Word of the Year 2016 | Oxford Languages". languages.oup.com. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  34. ^ "the idea of post-truth is not just that truth is being challenged, but that it is being challenged as a mechanism for asserting political dominance." McIntyre, Lee. Post-Truth (The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series) (p. 10). MIT Press. Kindle Edition.
  35. ^ a b c d e McIntyre, Lee C. (2018). Post-truth. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-53504-5. OCLC 1002297524.
  36. ^ 'The "other side" of the post-truth debate does not consist of people who defend it—or think that post-truth is a good thing—but those who deny that a problem even exists.' McIntyre, Lee. Post-Truth (The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series) (p. 10). MIT Press. Kindle Edition.
  37. ^ a b c Christina Pazzanese (14 July 2016). "Politics in a 'post-truth' age". Harvard Gazette. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  38. ^ Kathleen Lonsdale, Is Peace Possible? by Penguin Books, 1957, p 11
  39. ^ a b c "Free speech has met social media, with revolutionary results". New Scientist. 1 June 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  40. ^ Rommetveit, Kjetil (2022). Post-Truth Imaginations New Starting Points for Critique of Politics and Technoscience. London: Taylor & Francisc. ISBN 978-0-367-14681-8.
  41. ^ Bratich, Jack (12 March 2020). "Civil Society Must Be Defended: Misinformation, Moral Panics, and Wars of Restoration". Communication, Culture and Critique. 13 (3): 311–332. doi:10.1093/ccc/tcz041. ISSN 1753-9129.
  42. ^ Lewandowsky, Stephan; Ecker, Ullrich K. H.; Cook, John (1 December 2017). "Beyond Misinformation: Understanding and Coping with the "Post-Truth" Era". Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. 6 (4): 353–369. doi:10.1016/j.jarmac.2017.07.008. hdl:1983/1b4da4f3-009d-4287-8e45-a0a1d7b688f7. ISSN 2211-3681. S2CID 149003083.
  43. ^ McIvor, David (2011). "The Politics of Speed: Connolly, Wolin, and the Prospects for Democratic Citizenship in an Accelerated Polity". Polity. 43: 58–83. doi:10.1057/pol.2010.23. S2CID 145121254 – via SpringerLink.
  44. ^ a b Harsin, Jayson (1 January 2014). "Public argument in the new media ecology: Implications of temporality, spatiality, and cognition". Journal of Argumentation in Context. 3 (1): 7–34. doi:10.1075/jaic.3.1.02har. ISSN 2211-4742.
  45. ^ Serazio, Michael (3 February 2014). "The New Media Designs of Political Consultants: Campaign Production in a Fragmented Era". Journal of Communication. 64 (4): 743–763. doi:10.1111/jcom.12078. ISSN 0021-9916.
  46. ^ Harsin, Jayson (24 February 2015). "Regimes of Posttruth, Postpolitics, and Attention Economies". Communication, Culture & Critique. 8 (2): 327–333. doi:10.1111/cccr.12097.
  47. ^ Alexander, Paul (2008). Machiavelli's shadow: the rise and fall of Karl Rove. New York: Modern Times. ISBN 978-1-59486-825-2. OCLC 188823878.
  48. ^ a b c d Harsin, Jayson (2006). "Harsin, J., 2006. The rumour bomb: Theorising the convergence of new and old trends in mediated US politics". Southern Review: Communication, Politics & Culture. 39 (1): 84–110 – via Informit.
  49. ^ Ksiazek, Thomas B. (2019), "Fragmentation of News Audience", The International Encyclopedia of Journalism Studies, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 1–4, doi:10.1002/9781118841570.iejs0049, ISBN 978-1-118-84157-0, S2CID 159222770
  50. ^ Wallace, Julian (16 March 2018). "Modelling Contemporary Gatekeeping" (PDF). Digital Journalism. 6 (3): 274–293. doi:10.1080/21670811.2017.1343648. ISSN 2167-0811. S2CID 37222443.
  51. ^ Giomelakis, Dimitrios; Papadopoulou, Olga; Papadopoulos, Symeon; Veglis, Andreas (14 August 2021). "Verification of News Video Content: Findings from a Study of Journalism Students". Journalism Practice. 17 (5): 1068–1097. doi:10.1080/17512786.2021.1965905. ISSN 1751-2786. S2CID 238717909.
  52. ^ Brandtzaeg, Petter Bae; Følstad, Asbjørn; Chaparro Domínguez, María Ángeles (21 October 2018). "How Journalists and Social Media Users Perceive Online Fact-Checking and Verification Services". Journalism Practice. 12 (9): 1109–1129. doi:10.1080/17512786.2017.1363657. hdl:11250/2462724. ISSN 1751-2786. S2CID 149194871.
  53. ^ a b John Corner; Dick Pels (2003). Media and the restyling of politics: consumerism, celebrity and cynicism. London: Sage. ISBN 978-0-85702-184-7. OCLC 607530321.
  54. ^ Frank Esser `Tabloidization' of News. A Comparative Analysis of Anglo-American and German Press Journalism Archived 8 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine European Journal of Communication Vol 14, Issue 3, 1999 1 September 1999
  55. ^ Harrington, Stephen (2017), "What If 'Journalism' Is the Problem?: Entertainment and the 'De-mediatization' of Politics", in Harrington, Stephen (ed.), Entertainment Values: How do we Assess Entertainment and Why does it Matter?, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 165–178, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-47290-8_11, ISBN 978-1-137-47290-8
  56. ^ Richmond, Julia C; Porpora, Douglas V (15 December 2018). "Entertainment Politics as a Modernist Project in a Baudrillard World". Communication Theory. 29 (4): 421–440. doi:10.1093/ct/qty036. ISSN 1050-3293.
  57. ^ Rosa, Hartmut (1 November 2010). High-speed Society: Social Acceleration, Power, and Modernity. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-04770-6.
  58. ^ a b Hearn, Alison (15 August 2017). "Confidence man". Soundings. 66 (66): 79–89. doi:10.3898/136266217821733642.
  59. ^ a b c Harsin, Jayson (3 April 2021). "Aggro-truth: (Dis-)trust, toxic masculinity, and the cultural logic of post-truth politics". The Communication Review. 24 (2): 133–166. doi:10.1080/10714421.2021.1947740. ISSN 1071-4421. S2CID 237565651.
  60. ^ Hearn, A., & Hearn. (2011). Promotional culture. In D. Southerton, Encyclopedia of consumer culture. Sage Publications.
  61. ^ Megan Le Masurier (2020). Slow journalism. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-89161-8. OCLC 1180207840.
  62. ^ Dadge, David (2006). The war in Iraq and why the media failed us. Danny Schechter. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 0-275-98766-3. OCLC 67869940.
  63. ^ Zerilli, Linda M. G. (2 March 2020). "Fact-Checking and Truth-Telling in an Age of Alternative Facts". Le Foucaldien. 6 (1). doi:10.16995/lefou.68. ISSN 2515-2076.
  64. ^ a b c d e f Myrto Pantazi; Scott Hale; Olivier Klein (22 December 2021). "Social and Cognitive Aspects of the Vulnerability to Political Misinformation". Political Psychology. 42. Wiley: 267–304. doi:10.1111/pops.12797. S2CID 245431995. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  65. ^ Gelfert, Axel (2018). "Fake News: A Definition". Informal Logic. 38 (1): 84–117. doi:10.22329/il.v38i1.5068. ISSN 0824-2577. S2CID 55730612.
  66. ^ Pendleton, Susan Coppess (1 January 1998). "Rumor research revisited and expanded". Language & Communication. 18 (1): 69–86. doi:10.1016/S0271-5309(97)00024-4. ISSN 0271-5309.
  67. ^ Harsin, Jayson. "The Rumour Bomb: Theorising the Convergence of New and Old Trends in Mediated US Politics". Southern Review. 39 (1): 84–110.
  68. ^ "Lies, Damn Lies, and Viral Content". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
  69. ^ Cosentino, Gabriele (2020), "Post-truth Politics in Syria: 'Rumor Bombs' on the White Helmets", in Cosentino, Gabriele (ed.), Social Media and the Post-Truth World Order: The Global Dynamics of Disinformation, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 87–111, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-43005-4_4, ISBN 978-3-030-43005-4, S2CID 216167255
  70. ^ a b c Ned Simons (8 June 2016). "Tory MP Sarah Wollaston Switches Sides in EU Referendum Campaign". Huffington Post. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  71. ^ McDermott, Rose (April 2019). "Psychological Underpinnings of Post-Truth in Political Beliefs". PS: Political Science & Politics. 52 (2): 218–222. doi:10.1017/S104909651800207X. ISSN 1049-0965. S2CID 158316691.
  72. ^ Peter Preston (9 September 2012). "Broadcast news is losing its balance in the post-truth era". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  73. ^ "The UK's EU membership fee". Full Fact. 27 May 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  74. ^ Anthony Reuben (25 April 2016). "Reality Check: Would Brexit mean extra £350m a week for NHS?". BBC News. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  75. ^ Patrick Worrall (19 April 2016). "FactCheck: do we really send £350m a week to Brussels?". Channel 4 News. Archived from the original on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  76. ^ Stone, Jon (12 September 2016). "Vote Leave's £350m for the NHS pledge was 'just an example', says group's chair". The Independent. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  77. ^ Gove, Michael (3 June 2016). "Britain has had enough of experts, says Gove". Financial Times$5. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  78. ^ a b c d Michael Deacon (9 July 2016). "In a world of post-truth politics, Andrea Leadsom will make the perfect PM". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  79. ^ Roy Boston (22 December 2015). "Humanists and the Rise of "Post-Truth America"". The Humanist. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  80. ^ a b c Chris Cillizza (10 May 2016). "Donald Trump's post-truth campaign and what it says about the dismal state of US politics". The Independent. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  81. ^ Harsin, Jayson (15 October 2010). "That's Democratainment: Obama, Rumor Bombs and Primary Definers". Flow TV. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  82. ^ Kang, Cecilia, A. D. A. M. Goldman, and WASHINGTON—Edgar M. Welch. "In Washington pizzeria attack, fake news brought real guns." The New York Times 5 (2016).
  83. ^ Gaines, Brian J.; Kuklinski, James H.; Quirk, Paul J.; Peyton, Buddy; Verkuilen, Jay (1 November 2007). "Same Facts, Different Interpretations: Partisan Motivation and Opinion on Iraq". The Journal of Politics. 69 (4): 957–974. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2508.2007.00601.x. ISSN 0022-3816. S2CID 14544723.
  84. ^ Rozado, David; Hughes, Ruth; Halberstadt, Jamin (18 October 2022). "Longitudinal analysis of sentiment and emotion in news media headlines using automated labelling with Transformer language models". PLOS ONE. 17 (10): e0276367. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1776367R. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0276367. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 9578611. PMID 36256658.
  85. ^ Richard Sambrook (January 2012). "Delivering trust: Impartiality and objectivity in the digital age" (PDF). Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. University of Oxford.
  86. ^ Gay Alcorn (27 February 2014). "Facts are futile in an era of post-truth politics". The Age. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  87. ^
  88. ^ Ralph Keyes (2004). The Post-Truth Era: Dishonesty and Deception in Contemporary Life. St. Martin's Publishing. pp. 127–128. ISBN 978-1-4299-7622-0.
  89. ^ a b c Amulya Gopalakrishnan (30 June 2016). "Life in post-truth times: What we share with the Brexit campaign and Trump". The Times of India. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  90. ^ Gillian Tett (1 July 2016). "Why we no longer trust the experts". Financial Times. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  91. ^ a b Rob Boston (22 December 2015). "Humanists and the Rise of "Post-Truth America"". The Humanist. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  92. ^ a b c Katherine Viner (12 July 2016). "How technology disrupted the truth". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
  93. ^ Rory Carroll (1 August 2016). "Can mythbusters like Snopes.com keep up in a post-truth era?". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  94. ^ "Is Digital Culture Responsible for Post-Truth Politics? - Eliane Glaser | Open Transcripts". Open Transcripts. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  95. ^ a b Davies, William (24 August 2016). "The Age of Post-Truth Politics". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  96. ^ "New MIT Sloan research measures exposure to misinformation from political elites on Twitter". AP NEWS. 29 November 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  97. ^ Mosleh, Mohsen; Rand, David G. (21 November 2022). "Measuring exposure to misinformation from political elites on Twitter". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 7144. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13.7144M. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-34769-6. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 9681735. PMID 36414634.
  98. ^ "Facebook Fake News in the Post-Truth World - Case - Faculty & Research - Harvard Business School". www.hbs.edu. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  99. ^ a b Stewart Lockie (23 December 2016). "Post-truth politics and the social sciences". Environmental Sociology. 3 (1). Taylor & Francis: 1–5. doi:10.1080/23251042.2016.1273444. S2CID 151748913. Post-truth thrives on polarization and exaggerated difference. White versus black. Us against them. True versus false.
  100. ^ Amy Mitchell, Amy; Kiley, Jocelyn; Eva Matsa, Katerina; Gottfied, Jeffrey (21 October 2014). "Political Polarization & Media Habits". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  101. ^ Anthony Fauci (10 December 2022). "Anthony Fauci: A Message to the Next Generation of Scientists". New York Times. Retrieved 13 December 2022. We also must acknowledge that our fight against C‌‌ovid-19 has been hindered by the profound political divisiveness in our society. In a way that we have never seen before, decisions about public health measures such as wearing masks and being vaccinated with highly effective and safe vaccines have been influenced by disinformation and political ideology.
  102. ^ Jonathan D. Ostry; Prakash Loungani; Davide Furceri (June 2016). "Neoliberalism: Oversold?". Finance & Development. 53 (2). IMF. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  103. ^ George Monbiot (15 April 2016). "Neoliberalism – the ideology at the root of all our problems". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  104. ^ Stephen Metcalf (18 August 2017). "Neoliberalism: the idea that swallowed the world". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 December 2022. It isn't only that the free market produces a tiny cadre of winners and an enormous army of losers – and the losers, looking for revenge, have turned to Brexit and Trump. There was, from the beginning, an inevitable relationship between the utopian ideal of the free market and the dystopian present in which we find ourselves; between the market as unique discloser of value and guardian of liberty, and our current descent into post-truth and illiberalism.
  105. ^ a b Anthea Roberts; Nicolas Lamp (28 December 2021). Six Faces of Globalization: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Why It Matters (excerpt). Harvard University Press. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-674-24595-2. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  106. ^ Helfand, David J. (2017). "Surviving the Misinformation Age". Skeptical Inquirer. 41 (3): 34–39. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  107. ^ "The myth of post-truth politics". 20 April 2017.
  108. ^ Toby Young (16 July 2016). "The truth about 'post-truth politics'". The Spectator. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  109. ^ a b ""The post-truth world: Yes, I'd lie to you," The Economist Sept 10, 2016". The Economist. 10 September 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  110. ^ a b Alexios Mantzarlis (21 July 2016). "No, we're not in a 'post-fact' era". Poynter Institute. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  111. ^ Alexios Mantzarlis (7 October 2016). "Fact check: This is not really a post-fact election". The Washington Post. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  112. ^ John Connor (14 July 2014). "Tony Abbott's carbon tax outrage signals nadir of post-truth politics". The Age. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  113. ^ "GfdS wählt "postfaktisch" zum Wort des Jahres 2016". 9 December 2016.
  114. ^ Coker, Wincharles; Afriyie, Francis (2018). "Post-truth, the Print Media and Political Messages in Ghana". Covenant Journal of Communication. ISSN 2354-3515.
  115. ^ Iqbal, M. "Soal Al Maidah 51, Ahok: Saya Tak Berniat Melecehkan Ayat Suci Alquran". detiknews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  116. ^ "Supreme Court denies appeal from Buni Yani, uploader of infamous edited Ahok 'blasphemy' clip | Coconuts". coconuts.co/. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  117. ^ Genta, Kuno Yoseph; Wihartono (28 March 2022). Reconfiguring Post-Ahok Populism, Post-Truth, and Cyberspace in Indonesia. pp. 47–58. doi:10.5220/0008816600470058. ISBN 978-989-758-393-3. S2CID 211321470.
  118. ^ Snodgrass, Lyn (18 May 2017). "Academics can't change the world when they're distrusted and discredited". The Conversation. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  119. ^ Iain Gray (1 March 2012). "Beware the black art of post-truth politics". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 19 August 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  120. ^ Jim Murphy (23 September 2015). "We live in a volatile age of post-truth politics – and so Brexit cannot be ruled out". New Statesman. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  121. ^ a b Ian Dunt (29 June 2016). "Post-truth politics is driving us mad". politics.co.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  122. ^ Max Richter (8 July 2016). "Millions of us knew the Iraq war would be a catastrophe. Why didn't Tony Blair?". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2016. Blair's creative way with the facts seems in retrospect to be the beginning of the sort of post-truth politics we have seen in the recent Brexit debate, where fiction and reality were treated by Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson and their like as essentially interchangeable.
  123. ^ "Leader: The Iraq War and its aftermath". New Statesman. 6 July 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  124. ^ a b Mikey Smith, Rachel Bishop (3 June 2016). "Post-truth politics: Michael Gove accused of 'importing Trump campaign' to Britain with £350m a week claim". The Mirror. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  125. ^ Matthew Flinders, Post-truth, post-political, post-democracy: the tragedy of the UK's referendum on the European Union, OUPBlog (Oxford University Press) (3 July 2016).
  126. ^ a b Fact Checker (20 January 2021). "In four years, President Trump made 30,573 false or misleading claims". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 20 January 2021.
  127. ^ Dale, Daniel (5 June 2019). "Donald Trump has now said more than 5,000 false things as president". Toronto Star. Archived from the original on 3 October 2019.
  128. ^ Dale, Daniel (9 March 2020). "Trump is averaging about 59 false claims per week since ... July 8, 2019". CNN. Archived from the original on 9 March 2020. Retrieved 16 April 2020. (direct link to chart image)
  129. ^ Dale, Daniel; Subramaniam, Tara (9 March 2020). "Donald Trump made 115 false claims in the last two weeks of February". CNN. Archived from the original on 3 August 2021. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  130. ^ Yourish, Karen; Smart, Charlie (24 May 2024). "Trump's Pattern of Sowing Election Doubt Intensifies in 2024". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 24 May 2024.
  131. ^ Kellner, Douglas (2003). Media spectacle. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-16638-8. OCLC 52996629.
  132. ^ Western, Jon (January 2005). "The War over Iraq: Selling War to the American Public". Security Studies. 14 (1): 106–139. doi:10.1080/09636410591002518. ISSN 0963-6412. S2CID 154605456.
  133. ^ Rojecki, Andrew; Meraz, Sharon (19 May 2014). "Rumors and factitious informational blends: The role of the web in speculative politics". New Media & Society. 18 (1): 25–43. doi:10.1177/1461444814535724. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 31735058.
  134. ^ Hollander, Barry A. (30 April 2010). "Persistence in the Perception of Barack Obama as a Muslim in the 2008 Presidential Campaign". Journal of Media and Religion. 9 (2): 55–66. doi:10.1080/15348421003738769. ISSN 1534-8423. S2CID 144945608.
  135. ^ "That's Democratainment: Obama, Rumor Bombs, and Primary Definers Jayson Harsin / The American University of Paris – Flow". 15 October 2010. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  136. ^ Paul Krugman (23 December 2011). "The Post-Truth Campaign". The New York Times.
  137. ^ Scott, Sydney E.; Inbar, Yoel; Rozin, Paul (2016). "Evidence for Absolute Moral Opposition to Genetically Modified Food in the United States" (PDF). Perspectives on Psychological Science. 11 (3): 315–324. doi:10.1177/1745691615621275. PMID 27217243. S2CID 261060.
  138. ^ See Denialism § Genetically modified foods for extensive citations.
  139. ^ Heer, Jeet (1 December 2015), "Donald Trump Is Not a Liar; He's something worse: a bullshit artist", The New Republic, retrieved 22 July 2016
  140. ^ James Kerchick (29 June 2016). "What Trump and the Brexiteers have in common". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  141. ^ Leonhardt, David; Thompson, Stuart A. (23 June 2017). "Trump's Lies". New York Times. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  142. ^ Qui, Linda (27 April 2017). "Fact-Checking President Trump Through His First 100 Days". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  143. ^ Kessler, Glenn; Lee, Michelle Ye Hee (1 May 2017). "Fact Checker Analysis - President Trump's first 100 days: The fact check tally". Washington Post. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  144. ^ Drinkard, Jim; Woodward, Calvin (24 June 2017). "Fact check: Trump's missions unaccomplished despite his claims". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  145. ^ Remnick, David (28 November 2016). "Obama Reckons With A Trump Presidency". The New Yorker. Retrieved 24 January 2017.
  146. ^ "New Day Transcript". New Day. CNN. 22 July 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2022. GINGRICH: As a political candidate, I'll go with how people feel and I'll let you go with the theoreticians.
  147. ^ "GINGRICH As a political candidate, I'll go with how people feel and let you go with the theoreticians." McIntyre, Lee. Post-Truth (The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series) (pp14,15). MIT Press. Kindle Edition.
  148. ^ Sabrina Tavernise (6 December 2016). "As Fake News Spreads Lies, More Readers Shrug at the Truth". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 November 2022. I just like the satisfaction," said Mr. Laughlin, who started his own business and lives in an affluent Twin Cities suburb. "It's like a hockey game. Everyone's got their goons. Their goons are pushing our guys around, and it's great to see our goons push back.
  149. ^ "These [middle-class] voters were not motivated by ignorance. They listened to Trump's rhetoric [bit removed] on a level transcending the mere fact. As a friend of mine put it recently, Trump supporters took him seriously—they did not need to take him literally. His language is keyed to produce a feeling rather than make a convincing argument. The New York Times interviewed conservatives about what they regarded as truth, as opposed to "fake news," and learned that political frames and emotion guide the reception of information as credible or not. Part of being credible is resonating with the lives and struggles of one's audience. Cloud, Dana L.. Reality Bites. Ohio State University Press. Kindle Edition.
  150. ^ Dana L. Cloud (17 February 2018). Reality Bites: Rhetoric and the Circulation of Truth Claims in U.S. (1st ed.). Ohio State University Press. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-8142-1361-2. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  151. ^ Connor, John (November 2011). "Climate change and post-truth politics". Waste Management and Environment. 22 (10).
  152. ^ a b c d Moore, A., Invernizzi-Accetti, C., Markovits, E. et al. (2020). "Beyond populism and technocracy: The challenges and limits of democratic epistemology". Contemp Polit Theory. (19): 730–752. doi:10.1057/s41296-020-00398-1
  153. ^ Rosenfeld, Sophia A. (2019). "Chapter 4: Democracy in an Age of Lies". Democracy and Truth: A Short History. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 87–109. ISBN 978-0-8122-9585-6. OCLC 1076269729.

Further reading

edit