Lilie Chouliaraki's research interests broadly include Social and Cultural Theory, Ethics and Political Philosophy as well as Corporate Communication, Communication Theory and Discourse Studies. Her research focuses on the nature of mediated public discourse from an ethical and political perspective. She has published extensively on the moral implications of the media in contemporary public life, particularly on the link between mediation, social action and cosmopolitan citizenship. Part of her research further addresses the intersection between politics, culture and corporate discourse. She has also researched the mediation of youth politics as well as the workings of pedagogic discourse and its implications on youth identities.
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Introduction Distant Suffering on Television Mediation and Public Life The Paradoxes of Mediation Mediation, Meaning and Power The Analytics of Mediation Adventure News Suffering without Pity Emergency News Suffering without Pity Ecstatic News Suffering and Identification Mediation and Action The Cosmopolitan Public