Vývoj české politické propagace pohledem stranického tisku v letech 1920, 1946 a 1990
The Development of Czech Political Party Press Promotion in 1920, 1946, and 1990
dissertation thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/201156Identifiers
Study Information System: 215778
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- Kvalifikační práce [7315]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Jirák, Jan
Mücke, Pavel
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Humanities
Discipline
Historická sociologie
Department
PhD Historical Sociology
Date of defense
25. 6. 2025
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta humanitních studiíLanguage
Czech
Grade
Pass
Keywords (Czech)
stranický tisk, propagace, politika, politické strany, diskursivní analýzaKeywords (English)
party press, promotion, politics, political parties, discourse analysisTato é volební roky na parlamentní dobovým kontextem. Volby v roce 1920, konané po první v roce 1946 se svobodnými Sametové revoluci a staly se symbolem návratu demokracie. o mediálního formátu a vychází z textu Sociální konstrukce reality od Bergera a Luckmanna. Neopomíjí ale kterými stranický tisk mohl reagovat na dobový Prakt tiskoviny diskursivní a komparativní analýze,
This doctoral thesis examines three key electoral periods in Czech history: the parliamentary elections of 1920, 1946, and 1990. Each of these periods is characterised by a higher level of societal politicisation, influenced by historical contexts. The 1920 elections, held after the First World War, is marked as the first elections in the newly established Czechoslovakia. The 1946 elections, that came one year after the end of the Second World War, were the last free elections for decades. The 1990 elections, held after the Velvet Revolution, are closely associated with the return of democracy. During these periods, the majority of political parties published their own party press to communicate with readers and potential voters. The theoretical part of the thesis explores the construction of political reality within this largely outdated media format, working with The Social Construction of Reality by Berger and Luckmann. It also engages with media effects theories, analysing how the party press may have responded to or actively shaped political discourse. The practical part subjects the party press to discourse and comparative analysis, aiming to uncover how these publications constructed political reality. It also seeks to identify similarities and differences in political communication between...
