EBSCO'sCommunication & Mass Media Complete: An Appreciable Improvement Over Previous Communication Studies Indexing?
In: Behavioral & social sciences librarian, Band 26, Heft 4, S. 57-87
ISSN: 1544-4546
37274 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Behavioral & social sciences librarian, Band 26, Heft 4, S. 57-87
ISSN: 1544-4546
Aim of study. The aim of this paper is to analyze how the news media influences the construction of the social perception of forests and forestry.Area of study. The area covered by this study is Spain.Material and Methods. The materials used for the analysis were the online news related to items such as forest, bioenergy and biodiversity, in two leading newspapers in Spain from 2009 to 2012. The hypotheses tested were divided into two sets, one focused on the messages and another focused on the sources on these messages. Summative content analysis was applied, combining both quantitative and qualitative data analysis. The messages and sources were systematically explored and monitored.Main results: As main results, forest wildfires news is the most frequent issue mentioned in the media, however they require deeper reflection and debate. Keywords such as forest management, owners, harvesting, products, etc. are rarely found anymore; furthermore, new terms such as biomass, are not yet prevalent. On sources, official institutions, primarily the regional governments, dominate the news sources with a share of over 50%.Research highlights: Mass media analysis is considered the most appropriate complement for perception studies as it provides relevant basic information needed to design a communication plan. Further research is required on the role mass media plays in how we perceive and react to the environmental problems around us.Keywords: summative content analysis; policy analysis; ATLAS.ti; biomass; protected areas.
BASE
In: Peace & change: PC ; a journal of peace research, Band 40, Heft 1, S. 63-82
ISSN: 1468-0130
Many twentieth‐century theater scholars declared contemporary mainstream theater drained of any political efficacy. To them, the financing of mainstream productions necessitated giving no offense to elite investors who tend to hold the dominant ideology. These scholars advocated relinquishing mainstream spaces to capitalists and creating a radical theater outside the spotlight. This essay argues, however, that only in mainstream venues can progressive ideologies be assimilated and disseminated.Examining the 1985 production of The Normal Heart proves this thesis and demonstrates the political vitality of U.S. mainstream theater. The big‐budget and much‐marketed production used its position of high visibility—particularly in newspapers—to support organizations fighting the HIV/AIDS epidemic in ways radical performances in marginal venues could not. This article is a gesture toward a larger theory about the political potential mainstream theater wields in its interpolation by the mass media. Mainstream theater can act as a negotiating force between emergent and dominant ideologies.
Intro -- Title Page -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Notes on Contributors -- Editors' Introduction -- SECTION I: Eastern Approaches: Myths and their Makers -- 1: 'Out of your sacrificial death grows our socialist deed': Ernst Thälmann, the Antifascism Myth and Buchenwald Concentration Camp in East German Political Propaganda, 1945-58 -- 2: The Leader Cult in Communist Hungary, 1945-56: Propaganda, Institutional Background and Mass Media -- 3: Soviet Power and its Images: Celebrating Stalin's Seventieth Birthday -- 4: Ideological Pressure and Censorship: Czech Literature, 1948-57 -- 5: The Department of Agitation and Propaganda in Bulgaria, 1944-56 -- 6: Remembering the 'Martyrs of Antifascism' in Republican Italy: Piero Gobetti and the Italian Communist Party -- SECTION II: Getting the Message Across -- 7: Radio Luxembourg and Cold War Changes in European Attitudes Towards International Broadcasting -- 8: Greek and Yugoslav Public Radio in the 1940s and 1950s -- 9: Print, Power, and Persuasion: Political Poster Art in the Two German States during the First Decade of the Cold War -- 10: West European Identity in Marshall Plan Propaganda Films -- 11: New Cities for New People: Urban Planning and Mass Media Propaganda in Stalinist Poland and the GDR -- 12: 'Stalin's Skyscrapers' and the Propaganda of the New World Order after World War II -- SECTION III: The Politics of Entertainment -- 13: The Media Audience of a Soviet Republic in the Early Cold War: The Estonian SSR -- 14: Jazz in Austria in the Allied Powers' Cultural Propaganda during the Cold War, 1945-55 -- 15: Creating the 'New Man': Propaganda and its Alternatives in Hungarian Literature from Romania, 1948-65 -- 16: Jazz, Rock and Roll and Halbstarke: American Popular Culture in West Germany between Weimar Conservatism and Cold War Liberalism
In: European journal of communication, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 289-309
ISSN: 1460-3705
The campaign role of the mass media has often been studied from the standpoint of communication effects on voting results. This article offers a new approach, focusing on the media's role in constructing a meaning for election results. This meaning is negotiated and accepted by politicians and electors according to a process which is described here. Argumentation is based on an empirical study of the legislative election campaign in France in March 1986, using methods drawn from the agenda-setting literature and the author's model of `Abstracts for Decision' in public opinion formation.
Why should mass media be informational and accurate as much as its proponents would claim-and, conversely, disinformational and propagandistic as much as its critics would argue? Contrary to the conventional wisdom held by many since the modern era of mass media, neither of the two opposing views is correct, to the extent that a total analysis of media influence has yet to be adequately explored and understood. Something fundamentally vital to the analysis of communication has been missing
In: Communication research, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 41-60
ISSN: 1552-3810
During the first three years of the Nixon administration, the President's popularity in the Gallup Poll was found to be related both to the content of daily press coverage of the President and to the number of times he appeared on television. These findings support the argument that studying the mass media provides an important means of examining the exercise of presidential power. While further research is necessary to determine the impact of presidential media appearances on his popularity, this study is the latest in a number showing the impact of the daily news on the President's fortunes in the polls.
In: Journal of creative communications, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 1-22
ISSN: 0973-2594
Over the past 40 decades, spurred by McLuhan's prediction and the growing importance of international marketing and communication in a shrinking world, studies on the role of advertising as it relates to culture have grown. Despite the increased interest on the subject, few, if any studies, have dealt with an African country. This article serves as an attempt to bridge that gap.The article used semiotic analysis to explore the cultural values conveyed in 500-plus advertisements in the Nigerian mass media. This semiotic analysis of the 500-plus advertisements determined that, excluding texts, the most common symbols found in Nigerian advertisements were photos of human beings and products. The study also found that Nigerian advertisements did not employ well-established Nigerian ethnic or national symbols. For example, most of the advertisements did not use or combine any of the major or minor Nigerian languages.
In: Communication research, Band 27, Heft 6, S. 723-763
ISSN: 1552-3810
To estimate the impact of a mass media campaign to promote contraceptive use, a national longitudinal sample survey was conducted in September 1995 and March 1996. Recall of at least one television spot was 82.3%. Modern contraceptive use increased 2.1 percentage points. The conditional change regression analysis revealed that prior contraceptive intention and behavior, current ideation, and prior ideation were the best predictors of contraceptive behavior. The best predictor of ideation was prior level of ideation and recall of campaign messages. Thus, the campaign had a significant indirect effect on intention and behavior through its effect on ideation. Ideation was operationalized by combining cognitive, emotional, and social factors from a predictive model of strategic communication and behavior change. No endogeneity (reciprocity) with contraceptive intention and use was found in the statistical models for either campaign recall or ideation, an indication that the ordinary regression was an appropriate method to estimate the path coefficients.
This paper examines the religious dynamics image in contemporary Indonesia was presented by the printed mass media. Using van Dijk's critical discourse analysis method, and the hierarchy of influence media content of Pamela Shoemaker and Stephen Reese, this paper examines the content of popular articles in the Kompas and Republika for the period 2013-2017. These two print media were chosen because they are two different ideological poles. Kompas was born from Catholic activists and supported by several military officers. Meanwhile, Republika was founded by Islamic activists with government support. The themes of popular articles in both media revolve around issues of the state and democracy, political dynamics and Islamic parties, and spirituality. The religious discourse contest at Kompas and Republika was filled with Muslim scholars and leaders of Islamic mass organizations. Kompas does not provide enough space for new writers so that its popular articles are filled by monotonous scholars. On the other hand, Republika has promoted many new writers. However, Republika also features internal writers. Popular articles from Kompas and Republika put forward a moderate religious face. However, Republika seems to emphasize the Islamic side more, while Kompas appears to be more inclusive.
BASE
In: Izvestia of Saratov University. New Series. Series: Sociology. Politology, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 88-90
In: International journal of public opinion research, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 199-207
ISSN: 0954-2892
Investigates political reforms toward democratization in Hong Kong, focusing on relationships among civic duty, perceived political responsiveness, mass media, & voter participation. The hypothesis that citizens who support civic duty, are receptive to election-related mass media, & perceive high instances of political responsiveness are more likely to vote is tested with data from pre- & postelection telephone surveys in 1994/95 (N = 2,476 & 1,395 respondents, respectively). While the results support the hypothesis, logistic regression analysis shows that the correlations are weak. 1 Table, 1 Appendix, 26 References. T. Noland
In: University casebook series
In: Studies in family planning: a publication of the Population Council, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 107
ISSN: 1728-4465