Abstract
Mediatization is one of the modern buzzwords in communication science. Despite this, empirical research faces enormous problems, both intellectual and methodological. As mediatization is a process, it has to be analysed from a historical perspective. The case of the former German chancellor Helmut Schmidt gives us the opportunity to research nearly the whole history of the Federal Republic of Germany from its beginnings in the late 1940s until today, following Strömbäck’s four phases of mediatization. After World War II, Schmidt, chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1974 to 1982, started to write newspaper articles. Since 1983, he is copublisher of the weekly newspaper Die Zeit. The analysis of one special politician over six decades offers new insights into the interactions between media and politics on the micro-level. Under certain historical circumstances, media-conscious politicians initiate the mediatization of politics, without submitting politics to the logic of the mass media.
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