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Mass Media and Democratic Politics
In: Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research; Handbook of Politics, S. 477-491
The Mass Media and Latinos
In: Aztlán: international journal of Chicano studies research, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 131-148
Mass Media and American Politics
In: Political science quarterly: PSQ ; the journal public and international affairs, Band 108, Heft 4, S. 746
ISSN: 0032-3195
Leisure and the Mass Media
In: World leisure & recreation: official journal of the World Leisure Organisation, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 44-52
Peculiarities of Augmentatives in Modern Mass Media
The article analyzes lexical items, the augmentatives, that are used in the language of modern mass media; it is defined new lexical items and expansion of the sphere of their functioning in media materials on social and political and other subjects; it is defined the functional and stylistic role of augmentatives in the language of the press and negative assessment in publicistic materials. The descriptive research method and observation method were used as main in studying augmentatives in the language of Ukrainian periodicals of the XXI century. At different stages of the research the method of functional analysis was used to determine the stylistic load of lexical items. It is concluded that in the language of Ukrainian periodicals, the augmentatives are rarely used, unlike diminutives. They most often have a negative assessment function, representing neglect, condemnation, contempt, etc. Sometimes, with the help of augmentatives, they show the size of the object, phenomenon, or a living being that the author writes about. In general, the augmentatives give some expressive coloring to the text.
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Genre studies in mass media: a handbook
The study of various types of programming is essential for critical analysis of the media and also offers revealing perspectives on scoiety's cultural values, preoccupations, behavior, and myths. This handbook provides a systematic, in-depth approach to the study of media genres--including reality programs, game shows, situation comedies, soap operas, film noir, news programs, and more.
PERSONALITY DETERMINANTS OF MASS MEDIA PREFERENCES
In: Journalism quarterly: JQ ; devoted to research in journalism and mass communication, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 729-732
ISSN: 0196-3031, 0022-5533
Mass media: description and performance
In: The Michigan Speech Association curriculum guide series
Mass Media in Sub-Saharan Africa
In: African affairs: the journal of the Royal African Society, Band 95, Heft 380, S. 462-463
ISSN: 0001-9909
Scientists as Mass Media Sources
In: Journalism quarterly, Band 59, Heft 1, S. 52-59
Milestones in the development of mass communications in Malta ; Manipulation of the mass media
Publication of a conference held at AZAD Centre, Sliema, on February 17, 1978. ; Among the new States, Malta has one of the longest, almost uninterrupted traditions of press freedom and, for her size, is lucky to have had a variety of newspaper opinion. It was two well-known British liberals, John Austin and George Cornwall Lewis, who responding to appeals by the Maltese leader Giorgio Mitrovich, strongly recommended the grant of press freedom to the colony. That was in 1838, when the first papers and periodicals began to be published. Before that time we can hardly say that there was a journalistic tradition at all. The Order of st. John had a printing press in the eighteenth century, but this was mainly for official works. Besides, censorship always hung over Malta's head: in the mid-seventeenth century the Grand Master had opted to close a printing press instead of having to put up with interference from the Pope and Inquisitor who insisted on nihil obstat rights in any printed matter associated with religion or the church. During the brief period of French rule over Malta, from 1798 to 1800, a vaguely Bonapartist paper, Le Journal de Malte, was published; but again this was an official gazette rather than a newspaper. It was all 'liberty, equality and fraternity'; and woe to anybody who disagreed. The same style of paper, a government gazette, continued to be published in the first decades of British rule, first in Italian only, and subsequently in Italian and English until in the early twentieth century Maltese too made an appearance in it. Apart from this, in the period before 1838, very few people managed to get anything controversial printed. One was an Italian refugee; the others were Protestant missionaries. Otherwise the only way to get printed matter distributed in Malta was to have it printed in Italy or elsewhere outside the Island, at least until 1839. ; peer-reviewed
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RUSSIA'S IMAGE IN CHINESE MASS-MEDIA
In: Политическая лингвистика, Heft 3, S. 87-100