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Truth in Advertising?

Lies in Political Advertising and How They Affect the Electorate

Truth in Advertising? cover

Truth in Advertising?

Lies in Political Advertising and How They Affect the Electorate

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Description

This book represents the first systematic effort to examine (1) the factual accuracy of the claims made in an entire political advertising campaign, (2) the visuals and sound cues used in that advertising and their relationship with the tone and accuracy of ads, and (3) the impact of the accuracy of claims on what people know and how they vote in a real campaign. The research is based on several years of labor-intensive coding of the factual accuracy of every claim made in the presidential ads in the 2008 election as well as the ads for the races for the US Congress in Minnesota. We show how the accuracy of political ad claims, the visuals and sound of ads, and ad tone (particularly negativity) are related to voting behavior. We argue that understanding how the accuracy of political ad claims affects voters is now more important than ever.

This research has steered clear of the normative question of what such putative gains in knowledge represent, however. Does the content of negative advertising enhance voter capacities, such as the ability to locate candidates’ issue positions accurately or state reasons to like or dislike candidates based on accurate information about the candidates’ traits or issue stands? Does the accuracy of the information in political advertising matter—to voting behavior or vote choice––whether turnout goes up or down? Would voting more, while knowing less that is true be sufficient in a democracy? In studying the effects of advertising tone, such questions about advertising tone have not been asked. Our book redresses this lacuna. We show that negative advertising is more likely to make inaccurate claims. We show that ads making inaccurate claims also use a larger number of visual and sound distortions, perhaps tying up more cognitive capacities while pressing their untruthful arguments. We show links between inaccurate advertising and aggregate turnout, individual turnout, and individual political knowledge. The news is not good in an age of post-factual democracies.

Table of Contents

chapter 1. Communicating with Voters through Political Advertising:
Moving beyond Ad Tone to Think about the Accuracy of Ad Claims
chapter 2. Normative Political Theory, Advertising, and Political
Participation
chapter 3. “You can't handle the truth?” Previous Research on
Political Advertising
chapter 4. Evaluating the Accuracy, Visuals, and Sound of
Advertising and Their Impacts
chapter 5. Anatomy of an Ad Campaign: What Ads Say and
When They Say It
chapter 6. The Accuracy of Claims Made in Political Advertising
chapter 7. Spectacle, Message, and Meaning in the Visuals and
Sound of Political Advertising
Barbara Allen, Daniel Stevens, and Jeffrey Berg
chapter 8. Examining the Visuals and Sound in Political Advertising
chapter 9. The Effects of Ad Accuracy on Political Knowledge
and Turnout
chapter 10. Conclusion

Product details

Published Jun 14 2021
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 475
ISBN 9781498531610
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 39 tables; 32 graphs;
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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Bloomsbury Collections

This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.

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