Distributed for Intellect Ltd
Shaping Citizenship through Talk Radio
Listening to the 2024 UK Election
Can the mass media contribute to meaningful public debate in the run-up to an election?
Talk radio in the United States is said to have contributed to a political atmosphere in which the loudest, crudest, and simplest arguments prevail. Is there a different model of public talk that can contribute to a kinder, wiser, more empathetic democracy? In the run-up to the 2024 UK general election, Stephen Coleman listened to callers to the BBC’s daily phone-in show in the hope of finding answers to these questions. In this year-long study, we see the public expressing its mood, telling its stories, and testing its arguments.
Shaping Citizenship through Talk Radio argues that even in a time of democratic anxiety and rising division, people are still finding ways to talk, listen, and act together. It explains why democracies need reliable public spaces that help citizens connect and communicate across their differences. Reporting on what he found, Coleman also proposes a way forward for a more empathetic democratic discourse.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Listening to an Electorate Think
1. Elusive Conversations
2. Democracy as Working Through
3. Now It’s Your Turn to Listen to Me
4. Talk Radio as Civic Gathering Place
5. Listening to the Mood Chorus
6. How Stories Keep Elections Real
7. The Other Election Debates
8. After the Election, the Eruption
9. Speaking as a Citizen
10. Out-Talking the Demagogues
References
Index