Abstract
The concept of ideology has historically been a master signifier of critique in media and communication studies. However, the concept’s status has been decentred, to the extent that Downey, Titley and Toynbee recently argued – in this journal – ‘there’s no ideology critique’. I affirm their call for a reinvigoration of ideology critique in media studies, although I question the force of their claim that contemporary media researchers are indifferent to ideology. I also argue for a theoretically open-ended conception of ideology that interrogates the default ‘hermeneutics of suspicion’ of traditional ideology critique.
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