Through an analysis of visual grammar, symbolism, satire, and metaphor, the study reveals how China used visual culture to construct narratives of leadership within the Third World and shape international political discourse.
#PoliticalCartoons#China#ColdWar#VisualPolitics
New in Journal of Visual Political Communication (Vol. 12, Issue 2):
"The Good, the Bad and the Revolutionary: China’s Leadership of the Non-Aligned States Through Anti-Imperialist Political Cartoons" by Avital Zuk Avina.
🔗 https://t.co/rPgVYsjchV
How did China seek to lead the non-aligned states during the Cold War? This article examines the 1967 exhibition of Afro-Asian People’s Anti-Imperialist Caricatures, showing how political cartoons became a medium for anti-imperialist solidarity and political messaging.
New in Journal of Visual Political Communication (Vol. 12, Issue 2):
"Studying Visual Disinformation: A Computational Literature Review of Current Issues, Trends and Research Methods of a Growing Field" by Xénia Farkas & Moa Eriksson Krutrök.
🔗 https://t.co/oO8eUoUJsH
New in JVPC (Vol 12, Issue 2): The Implicit Paradox in Mahatma Gandhi’s Last Fast" by Deepali Yadav, Vipin K. Kadavath & Gitanjali Singh
Exploring how Gandhi’s final fast differed from his previous fasts & why it failed to achieve its intended impact.
https://t.co/HUv9n9VXFC
Personal content (food, pets, nature) doesn’t always reduce negative reactions among viewers who oppose the politician. Study highlights how platform, audience predispositions, and content features together shape responses to populist communication.
#JVPC#DigitalPolitics
📢 New in Journal of Visual Political Communication (Vol. 12, Issue 2)!
Exploring viewers’ visual attention & emotional responses to populist communication – a lab study of Finns Party leader Riikka Purra on Instagram & TikTok.
📖 Read: https://t.co/DSmB0C75Mq
Platform shapes attention & emotion: On Instagram, users focus on captions & comments; on TikTok, visuals dominate attention and emotional responses. Captions guide interpretation on Instagram, while videos drive impact on TikTok.
#SocialMedia#VisualPolitics#TikTok#Instagram
JVPC features Xénia Farkas’ open access article: “Visual political communication research: A literature review from 2012 to 2022.”
This review analyzes 499 studies on how visuals shape politics on social media & TV.
Read the full article: https://t.co/9FhB8hicSD
Key insights from 499 studies on visual political communication:
👤 Personalization & celebritization dominate ⚡ Populists use visuals strategically ♀️ Gendered portrayals persist ✊ Memes, protests & activism mobilize politics
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Excited to announce my book Digital Nationalism and Affective Governance (Routledge) is available for pre-order TODAY! Digital propaganda in China operates under soft authoritarianism, with nationalism co-produced by state, platforms, and citizens. https://t.co/n9NnAJ6MMK
📩 If you've registered for #ICA26, you should have received an email granting you access to the hotel block. Just a heads-up, the hotel link will be available to the general public starting tomorrow, Thursday, March 5.
Interested in starting an ICA Chapter in your country? ICA members can now propose new Regional Chapters by 1 April 2026. Join our informational webinar on 19 March 2026 (07:00–08:00 Washington, D.C. time) to learn more. 🔗 https://t.co/vAMBPfq7ER
Registration is open for #ICA2026! Don’t miss your chance to connect, learn, and share with the global communication community. Register early and save: https://t.co/BKgOR9fe21