0%

Book Description

This book brings together a broad and diverse range of new and radical approaches to public relations focussing on the increasingly vital role that visual, sensory and physical elements factors play in shaping communication. Engaging with recent developments in critical and cultural theories, it outlines how non-textual and non-representational forces play a central role in the efficacy and reception of public relations.

Challenging the dominant accounts of public relations which center on the purely representational uses of text and imagery, the book critiques the suitability of accepted definitions of the field and highlights future directions for conceptualizing strategic communication within a multi-sensory environment. Drawing on the work of global researchers in public relations, visual culture and communication, design and cultural theory, it brings a welcome inter-disciplinary approach which pushes the boundaries of public relations scholarship in a global cultural context.

This exciting analysis will be of great interest to public relations scholars, advanced students of strategic communication, as well as communication researchers from cultural, media and critical studies exploring PR as a socio-cultural phenomenon.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Figures
  6. Contributors
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. 1 Visual and spatial public relations: strategic communication beyond text
  9. PART 1 Visual dimensions of public relations
    1. 2 Public relations as visual meaning-making
    2. 3 Comic books, science (fiction) and public relations
    3. 4 Picturing statistical narratives: a century of data visualisation in public relations practice
  10. PART 2 Spatial dimensions of public relations
    1. 5 Limits or opportunities for strategic communication? The Role of Space and Place in Mediating #Demo2012
    2. 6 The communicative function of public spaces
    3. 7 A time and place: the Las Vegas Mob Museum’s experiential public relations
  11. PART 3 Researching visual and spatial public relations
    1. 8 A visual history of BP’s use of public relations after Deepwater Horizon
    2. 9 Environmental multi-modal communication: semiotic observations on recent campaigns
    3. 10 Exploring visual experiments: measuring multi-modal messages in laboratory research
    4. 11 Conclusions and future directions
  12. Index
18.220.160.216