1,030 results
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2. 'Be a gen'l'm'n and a Conserwative Sammy': Political Remediations of the Pickwick Papers in the Provincial Press (1836–1837).
- Author
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Holdway, Katie
- Subjects
- *
LITERARY criticism , *NEWSPAPER presses , *SERIAL publications , *ENGLISH newspapers , *VICTORIAN Period in literature , *VICTORIAN Period, Great Britain, 1837-1901 - Abstract
Throughout its serial run, Charles Dickens's Pickwick Papers (1836–7), was repurposed hundreds of times by the provincial press. From acting as innocuous filler material to making strategic political statements, provincial newspaper editors evoked, excerpted and adapted Pickwick as quickly as Dickens was penning the instalments, showing a keen responsiveness to political topicalities relevant to their reading communities. This article contends that these types of journalistic re-use benefit from being read collectively as a form of remediation, defined by Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin as 'the formal logic by which new media refashion prior media forms'. It argues that these remediations are vital to understanding the politics of the provincial press because they became one method through which provincial newspapers articulated a localised response to the national political debates that raged following the 1832 Reform Act. As well as reflecting the political priorities of specific communities, these remediations nuance our understanding of Pickwick 's popularity by drawing attention to aspects of its construction that lent themselves to re-use. While explicit engagement with party politics is conspicuously absent from Pickwick , provincial editors capitalised upon this generality and imbued their re-workings of the serial with a partisanship that Dickens himself avoided, while using his name to substantiate and authorise their own pieces. In this respect, these remediations invite us to place Pickwick at the heart of political debate in the papers, by foregrounding the close relationship between newspaper politics, serial literature, and provincial identity in the 1830s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Writing for the papers
- Author
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Freadman, Anne
- Published
- 2023
4. "Print paper ought to be as free as the air and water": American Newspapers, Canadian Newsprint, and the Payne-Aldrich Tariff, 1909-1913.
- Author
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LITTLE, GEOFFREY ROBERT
- Subjects
TARIFF ,WOOD-pulp ,NEWSPAPERS ,PAPER pulp ,IMPORT taxes ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
The 1909 Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act resulted in significant duties and taxes on imports of Canadian newsprint and wood pulp, a finished product and a commodity in constant demand in the United States. In response, American newspapers took up the cause of duty-free pulp and paper and positioned themselves in opposition to the "Paper Trust," a cabal of papermakers of which International Paper was chief. While there have been important studies of the history of American newsprint, no historian has yet analyzed the discourse and rhetoric employed by the papers themselves in opposition to the tariff. The repeal of the tariff in 1913 resulted in the fantastical growth of the Canadian newsprint industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
5. READING HABITS OF STUDENTS: A CASE STUDY OF PUNJABI UNIVERSITY PATIALA.
- Author
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Maan, Inderjeet Singh and Ghuman, Surinder Singh
- Subjects
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READING , *ELECTRONIC paper , *PERIODICAL reading - Abstract
The present study was conducted to determine the reading habits of students at Punjabi University Patiala. The focus of this paper is to ascertain the average time of reading of students and their choice of reading material. A questionnaire was developed to collect the primary data and distributed among the students via Google form. The data was analysed by simple percentage method and presented in bar charts. Book remain the most preferred reading material for the students, followed by newspaper, class notes, journals, magazines, and thesis / dissertation. The majority of students read general knowledge books followed by subject related books. A large number of students read from both paper and digital. Respondents prefer to reading in the morning time. The Library is the preferred place by the respondents for reading. The majority of the respondents are motivation from the teachers for reading. Major hindrance to reading habit by the students is less time and more use of social media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
6. "El botafuego que volcaniza la nación": formación de un marco discursivo común sobre libertad de imprenta en papeles públicos en Colombia y la República de Nueva Granada (1821-1851).
- Author
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Vélez-Rendón, Juan-Carlos
- Subjects
FREEDOM of the press ,PRINTING presses ,PUBLIC opinion ,DISCONTENT ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Copyright of Historia y Sociedad (01218417) is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Facultad de Ciencias Humanas y Economicas and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Sunday Paper: A Media History
- Author
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Moore, Paul, author, Gabriele, Sandra, author, Moore, Paul, and Gabriele, Sandra
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- 2022
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8. A Framework for Measuring Relevancy in Discovery Environments: Increasing Scalability and Reproducibility.
- Author
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Galbreath, Blake, Merrill, Alex, and Johnson, Corey M.
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WORLD Wide Web ,SERIAL publications ,ECOLOGY ,COMPUTER software ,SEASONS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,CITATION analysis ,NEWSPAPERS ,STUDENTS ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,BOOKS ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,MEDICAL research ,AUTOMATION ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Institutional discovery environments now serve as central resource databases for researchers in the academic environment. Over the last several decades, there have been numerous discovery layer research inquiries centering primarily on user satisfaction measures of discovery system effectiveness. This study focuses on the creation of a largely automated method for evaluating discovery layer quality, utilizing the bibliographic sources from student research projects. Building on past research, the current study replaces a semiautomated Excel Fuzzy Lookup Add-In process with a fully scripted R-based approach, which employs the stringdist R package and applies the Jaro-Winkler distance metric as the matching evaluator. The researchers consider the error rate incurred by relying solely on an automated matching metric. They also use Open Refine for normalization processes and package the tools together on an OSF site for other institutions to use. Since the R-based approach does not require special processing or time and can be reproduced with minimal effort, it will allow future studies and users of our method to capture larger sample sizes, boosting validity. While the assessment process has been streamlined and shows promise, there remain issues in establishing solid connections between research paper bibliographies and discovery layer use. Subsequent research will focus on creating alternatives to paper titles as search proxies that better resemble genuine information-seeking behavior and comparing undergraduate and graduate student interactions within discovery environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Contemporary, Racialised Conflicts over LGBT-Inclusive Education: More Strategic Secularisms than Secular/Religious Oppositions?
- Author
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Karl Kitching
- Abstract
This paper analyses public conflicts over school policies that seek to advance Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) equality. It focuses in particular on conflicts where Muslims, who protest LGBT-inclusive policies, become racialised as other to secular national/Western values. Growing attention has been paid to the secular arguments used by majority and minority religious groups to publicly counter LGBT-inclusive education. In this paper, I contend that neither contemporary arguments for, or against, LGBT-inclusive education are neatly secular, i.e., non-religious, in their public appearance. Introducing a Critical Secular approach, I contend multiple parties in such conflicts work with "strategic" secularisms. Strategic secularisms are prevailing discourses which privatise, and deprivatise (make public), aspects of minority religious and sexual identities on neo-colonial, secular Christian terms. I present a thematic analysis of 149 newspaper articles covering protests largely by Muslims against LGBT-inclusive education outside schools in Birmingham, England. The analysis shows that newspapers foregrounded discourses seeking to privatise (assert private authority over) or deprivatise (publicly surveil) Muslim religiosity. LGBT identities were also variously framed as "beliefs" to be kept private, or an essential part of the public self which must be confessed to be "free". Based on this analysis, I argue public discourse should certainly challenge queer/Muslim and secular/religious dichotomies. But more fundamentally, there is a need to cultivate education publics that refuse strategic secularisms based in neo-colonial, racialised discourses of secular Christian civilisation, and engage the losses created by the privatising and deprivatising of specific forms of minority religious and sexual identity.
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- 2024
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10. Rollin' papers: Newspaper coverage of cannabis legalization in Canada.
- Author
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Aversa, Joseph, Cleave, Evan, Jacobson, Jenna, Hernandez, Tony, Dizonno, Stephanie, and Macdonald, Michael
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- *
LEGALIZATION , *NEWSPAPERS , *ATTRIBUTION of news , *REPORTERS & reporting , *PUBLIC opinion , *DRUG legalization - Abstract
With Canada becoming the first G20 country to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, there has been increasing interest in the emergence of this new marketplace. Newspaper framing helps to shape public opinion on legalization and news sources play a role in determining how the public perceives the use of cannabis. This research analyzes how mainstream newspapers reported on the legalization of recreational cannabis in Canada in the years before and after legalization (between 2016 and 2019). Using a content analysis of 1,390 cannabis-related articles, 11 dominant reporting themes are identified. Over time, there was a shift from negative and sensationalist cannabis news coverage toward more balanced and progressive framing. The findings identify the influence of editorial political stance on thematic coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Metaphors in Media Discourse: A Closer Look at Newspapers
- Author
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Ludmila Baturina, Elena Panova, Elena Tjumentseva, Zulkhumar Jumanova, Nikolay Lepikhov, Ilona Koroleva, Galina Vorobeva, and Elena Khripunova
- Abstract
As newspapers follow editorial work, the author's identity remains in the background. Hence, newspapers' discursive features should be studied from textual perspectives to understand the social dimension of the messages produced in such texts. What is more, pragmatically, the text as a whole and its separate language units with their structural elements require careful attention. Thus, this paper aims to analyze onomastic metaphors as one of the structural-stylistic types functioning in the language of newspapers. We analyzed the Moskovskij Komsomolets, Arguments and Facts, Komsomolskaya Pravda, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, and Izvestia during our analysis, with specific attention paid to the proper names as the binding elements with their substantial and semantic functions. Our results suggest that certain metaphorical language uses appear repetitively in the texts.
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- 2024
12. 'Rising Number of Homeless Is the Legacy of Tory Failure': Discoursal Changes and Transitivity Patterns in the Representation of Homelessness in 'The Guardian' and 'Daily Mail' from 2000 to 2018
- Author
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Gómez-Jiménez, Eva M. and Bartley, Leanne Victoria
- Abstract
Experts in different fields have claimed that the UK has experienced a process of growing economic inequality since the 1970s. Following Fairclough's dialectal-relational approach, this paper presents a detailed, systematic analysis of the representation of homeless people and homelessness in "The Guardian" and "Daily Mail" from 2000 to 2018, in order to explore how these have been discursively represented over time. Therefore, our study addresses two specific research questions: How have homelessness and homeless people been represented in the UK press? Are there any discoursal changes in representation with the passing of time? The analysis, which has employed mostly qualitative but also quantitative (statistical) methods drawing on corpus-assisted discourse analysis, is informed by the theory of TRANSITIVITY within Systemic Functional Linguistics. Results indicate that, within an overall negative representation of homeless people and homelessness in this period, there have been some significant discoursal changes over time. As such, this paper contributes to critical discourse studies and transitivity research on a relevant social problem, that of growing economic inequality in the UK.
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- 2023
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13. Assessing Variation and Change in Newspaper Portrayals of Muslims: The influence of the Trump Election and Differences across the United States in Local and National Papers*.
- Author
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Adamczyk, Amy, Greene‐Colozzi, Emily, Keles, Senahan Kiyal, and Murati, Aida
- Subjects
- *
MUSLIMS , *NATION-state , *ELECTIONS , *NEWSPAPERS , *POLITICAL campaigns , *MULTILEVEL models , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Since Donald Trump's political campaign, Americans have appeared increasingly divided over public opinion issues and U.S. policies with the media seemingly reflecting these divisions. One of Trump's early initiatives was the "Muslim ban," which restricted visitors from seven Muslim‐majority countries. Focusing on the portrayal of Muslims in over 900 hand‐coded articles, our study uses multilevel modeling techniques to examine how newspapers changed their frames and claimsmakers in discussions about Muslims before and after Trump was elected. After the election, newspapers were more likely to include government claimsmakers and an immigration frame and were less likely to mention a radical terrorist leader or portray Muslims as violent. Trump's election and the ban may have ushered in a more sympathetic view of Muslims with more articles focused on them as victims of violence and negative expressions. Across counties, states, and newspapers and between the national versus local presses, we find almost no significant differences in how Muslims were portrayed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. Framing Neoliberalism: A Content Analysis of Ley de Reforma Educativa de Puerto Rico
- Author
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Virella, Patricia M.
- Abstract
The American educational policy agenda has been fraught with neoliberal laws that center educational improvement and innovation (Barros, 2012). Neoliberalism operates on the premise that market competition will spur excellence in educational opportunities and decrease the education debt in marginalized communities (Fejes & Salling Olesen, 2016). Moreover, in the case of urban education systemic reforms, researchers need to endeavor how marginalized communities relay their concerns or endorsements in the media. News articles are one appropriate unit of analysis for investigating this problem. In this paper, I examine how an education reform law in Puerto Rico, "Ley de Reforma Educativa de Puerto Rico" (LREPR), was reported on in the four most popular newspapers on the Island. Conducting content analysis of newspaper articles produced findings that contribute to the policy literature by describing three central frames found in the media coverage of LREPR: (a) rhetoric on the "Free Selection of Schools" school voucher program, (b) the effects of mass school closures on municipalities, and (c) rhetoric on Alianza Schools--Puerto Rico's Charter Schools Initiative. I close with how the frames depart from the Republican-leaning political affiliation of the newspapers and present a collective resistance to the neoliberal education reform policy.
- Published
- 2023
15. Family Support and the Media in Ireland: Newspaper Content Analysis 2014-2017
- Author
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O'Connor, Patricia, McGregor, Caroline, and Devaney, Carmel
- Abstract
The objective of this paper is to inform a critical analysis of how the media portray family support in Ireland. Findings of a content analysis carried out on national and regional Irish newspapers between 2014 and 2017 are presented which describe communication about family support services provided by Tusla-Child and Family Agency. Results show that even though child protection was not used as a specific search term, news items on the Child and Family Agency and family support were usually focused on child protection and children in care. Results also show that family support activities are reported more positively in local papers compared to national papers. In the discussion, we argue that these findings are important as the media plays an important role in how the public understand, view, and engage with integrated child protection and welfare systems. We consider the implications of the research and advocate working with the media to inform their interpretation and understanding of family support. We suggest this is important as the manner in which the media communicate and frame family support as part of the overall child protection and welfare system is one of the main influences on public understandings and awareness of preventative family support and child welfare services.
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- 2023
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16. A Contrastive Study of Hedges in COVID-19 Reports Selected from China Daily and the New York Times
- Author
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Ya'nan, Wang, Zhiling, Tian, and Jinghua, Wang
- Abstract
Based on Jef Verschueren's Adaptation Theory, Lakoff's definition and Prince et al.'s classification of hedges, this paper takes New York Times and China Daily from January 23rd to April 8th, 2020 as corpus sources, randomly selects 39 COVID-19 reports, and makes a contrastive study of hedges among them, aiming at exploring the similarities and differences in the use of hedges in COVID-19 reports selected from Chinese and American mainstream newspapers and further revealing their influencing factors.
- Published
- 2023
17. Teachers' Politicity as a Sociohistorical Juncture: Bringing a Freirean Angle to Education Policy Studies
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Rocío Fernández Ugalde
- Abstract
This paper engages with the Freirean concept of politicity for critical policy studies in education. The first part lays the ground to expand the conceptualisation of teachers' politicity. I argue this entails an examination of the limits and possibilities within a juncture. To develop the argument, the second part focuses on a teacher strike that took place in Chile and draws on corpus-driven discourse analysis to explore news from a national teacher organisation and from an influential newspaper. Through the angle of politicity, I identify and discuss ideational projects during the strike with an emphasis on counterhegemonic resources for change.
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- 2024
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18. Journalistic ethics and elections news coverage in the Ghanaian press: a content analysis of two daily Ghanaian newspaper coverage of election 2020
- Author
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Amadu, Mohammed Faisal, Mumuni, Eliasu, and Chentiba, Ahmed Taufique
- Published
- 2023
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19. Genevieve Hargiss: A Biographical Portrait of an Exemplary Twentieth-Century Music Educator
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Gilliam, Tianna M.
- Abstract
The purpose of this historical investigation was to contribute to the growing body of knowledge about women in music education by means of documenting the life and career of Genevieve F. Hargiss (1912-1995), a lesser known yet exemplary twentieth-century music educator. Through the investigation of primary source materials including Hargiss's personal scrapbooks, interviews, and her scholarly publications, as well as newspaper articles and oral histories, this paper explores Hargiss's contributions to the field of music education from 1929 to 1982. This study argues that Hargiss made a lasting impact in her field through her innovative, research-based improvements to professional teacher-training programs and elementary general music programs in Kansas, Arizona, and across the U.S. Hargiss blazed a trail for women in the field of music education through her excellence in performing, research, mentoring, and teaching; a brilliant educator and scholar -- "not just for her time, but for any time."
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- 2023
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20. Interacting with digitised historical newspapers: understanding the use of digital surrogates as primary sources
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Late, Elina and Kumpulainen, Sanna
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- 2022
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21. Sinophobia in Hong Kong News Media
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Lin, Cong and Jackson, Liz
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Sinophobia (anti-Chinese sentiment) has become normalised and increasingly acceptable in Hong Kong in recent decades. Such Sinophobia intersects with aims of protecting what is local in the society, as seen in Hong Kong news media. This paper first explores the concept of "Sinophobia." It then provides a background on Sinophobia in Hong Kong, explaining the tensions between the identities of Hong Kong/HongKongers and Mainland China/Mainland Chinese. After elaborating on the role of media and the nature of local media in Hong Kong, this paper examines Sinophobic, stereotypical and quasi-racist discourse in three major Hong Kong news sources. While respecting Hong Kong heritage is a valuable goal, the Sinophobia accompanying some such aims can be seen to fuel hatred among people. In this context, encouraging a more inclusive and reflective discourse is warranted to work against the pitfalls of Sinophobia as a particular form of xenophobia in Hong Kong.
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- 2022
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22. Print Imprint: The Connection Between the Physical Newspaper and the Self.
- Author
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Mathews, Nick
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,BUSINESS losses ,SELF ,NOSTALGIA - Abstract
This research puts forward the theoretical concept "print imprint," articulating the connection between the printed newspaper and its reader's "Self." This paper contends that the printed newspaper draws out the meaningfulness of ownership, touch and nostalgia, all influential ingredients of the self. This research centers on interviews with 19 former readers of a weekly newspaper that shuttered. The findings illustrate the significance, usefulness and uniqueness of the printed newspaper. In particular, participants expressed a relationship with the printed newspaper, calling it "my paper." Ultimately, this research argues that the loss of the weekly newspaper prompted a loss or lessening of self of the abandoned readers. Finally, this article argues this "print imprint" extends beyond printed newspapers and should be considered for all print products, including magazines and books, pointing to future research possibilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Measuring the Partisan Behavior of U.S. Newspapers, 1880 to 1980.
- Author
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Hirano, Shigeo and Snyder Jr., James M.
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PARTISANSHIP ,NEWSPAPERS ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
In this paper, we study newspaper partisan behavior and content, which we measure using coverage of and commentary on partisan activities, institutions, and actors. We use this measure to describe the levels of relative partisan behavior during the period 1880 to 1900, and to describe changes over the period 1880 to 1980. We find that, on average, newspapers were initially highly partisan, but gradually became less partisan over time. Importantly, we find as much change after the 1910s as before, which contributes to the existing literature that focuses on changes in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. We also investigate words and phrases that had negative or positive partisan connotations in particular periods. Finally, we examine whether some of the common hypotheses offered in the literature can account for the changes. The initial findings suggest that these explanations can only account for part of the decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Dialogic Approach to the Analysis of the Meaning-Making Process in a Blended Setting
- Author
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Beraldo, Rossana, Barbato, Silviane, and Ligorio, M. Beatrice
- Abstract
This paper analyses meaning-making processes in a blended setting--face-to-face interaction and web forum--purposely created for collaborative learning activity. The analysis focuses on one pair out of 14 dyads. The dyad comprises two female students aged 17 and 18 who attended a Brazilian third-year state secondary school. We envisioned intertextuality in a seamless thematic flux using a single theme--about everyday problems in the culture--by two different problem-solving tasks. Task#1 required discussing two polemic reports published in an online newspaper: one in favour of using digital technologies in class, the other against it. Task#2 involved perspective-taking, where students should imagine the school in 20 years. Afterwards, the pair participated in an episodic interview focusing on their participation in both tasks. The interactions were video recorded. To map the meaning-making processes, we applied the dialogic thematic analysis looking for centripetal and centrifugal forces. A semantic map was drawn and discussed. Altogether, the paired and grouped collaborative activities in blended learning promoted authorial production. Our dyad achieved reflective meta-analysis when they compared their viewpoints with the perspective of their colleagues by using justifications and explanations grounded in their production, generating reflexivity and agency in dialogue.
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- 2022
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25. Promoting ESL Students' Critical Thinking Skills through a Transitivity Analysis of Authentic Materials
- Author
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Velasco, Ender
- Abstract
Using authentic materials in the English as a second language (ESL) classroom can develop students' critical thinking (CT) skills, expose them to more realistic English, and support their motivation. Carrying out text analyses of authentic materials in the ESL classroom can also help students become more critical in their approach to reading. Grounded in systemic functional linguistics (SFL) concepts, this paper puts forward a series of text analysis tasks, so ESL teachers can introduce their adult students to the concepts of transitivity and intentionality found in opposing newspaper articles dealing with conflict. Overall, these analyses show how the active voice can highlight the semantic value of intentionality via material processes, and how writers use strategies such as passivization and fronting of items in clauses to emphasize the responsibility for wrongdoing when reporting news. The analyses also show that context is important in determining degrees of intentionality, and intentionality can be attributed to the material processes of human actors portrayed as non-human actors. Understanding these concepts can help adult ESL students become better critical readers/thinkers.
- Published
- 2022
26. Discourses of fact-checking in Swedish news media
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Juneström, Amalia
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- 2022
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27. "It's the Best Job on the Paper" – The Courts Beat During the Journalism Crisis.
- Author
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Jones, Richard
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,PRESS ,FREEDOM of the press ,LAW reports, digests, etc. ,TELEVISION journalists ,LAYOFFS - Abstract
Local journalism in the UK has been described as being in "crisis". Local newspapers have experienced years of declining circulations and staff cuts, leading to questions about how effectively those institutions can continue to perform normative functions of journalism. One of those is to report on the courts. Through analysis of 22 semi-structured interviews with local newspaper reporters who cover the courts beat, agency court reporters who supply the local press, as well as broadcast journalists involved in both local and national court coverage, this paper helps to establish how the daily newswork of court journalists has developed amid a turbulent period in journalism, especially local journalism. The research finds that court reporting has been less affected than other news beats but faces a series of challenges related to financial cuts and other pressures. While the local press has become even more essential to the provision of court reporting, a central part of the news media's fourth estate role, those challenges affect the ability of court reporters to perform this function. This paper recommends that policymakers consider using a form of public funding to guarantee the future of court reporting at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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28. المعلم داوود صليوا وتأسيس جريدة صدى بابل.
- Author
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حنان محمد عبدالز and ياسين شهاب شكري
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MODERN history ,NEWSPAPERS ,IRAQIS - Abstract
Copyright of Adab Al-Kufa is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
29. Uneasy Partners: The Coming Together of Lindsay-Schaub Newspapers.
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Hartley, Robert E.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,UNITED States census ,BUSINESS enterprises ,HOME offices ,SALE of business enterprises ,SHAREHOLDER activism ,URBANIZATION - Abstract
The Illinois media corporation numbers tell a current-day story: Gannett Company, with headquarters in Virginia, owns fifteen daily newspapers, in communities scattered across the state, such as Rockford, Peoria, Springfield, Marion, Olney, Pontiac, Macomb, Kewanee, Galesburg, Freeport. 22 Lindsay, "Biography", 1-4. 23 Lindsay, "Biography", 1-4. 24 "We Must Be Truly Independent", (1943), in I Publisher Reports i , 9. 25 "A Newspaper Is Far More Than a Business Enterprise", (1955), in I Publisher Reports i , 10-11. 26 Newspaper purchases after the merger in 1931 are listed in Henebry, "History of the Herald and Review." In 1912, he left that paper and became general manager of the I Herald. i In 1920, Lindsay purchased controlling interest in the business and became president and general manager.[9] Howard Schaub, a Charleston, Illinois, native, went to work in a printing shop at the age of eleven and became hooked on the newspaper printing business. By 1912, two daily newspapers served Decatur: The I Herald i published in the morning, afternoon, and on Sundays, and the I Review i also in the morning, afternoon, and on Sundays. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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30. A Content Analysis of News Analyses: Examining Trends in News Content and Resources.
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Gilbert, Stacy and Kelley, Rebecca
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CONTENT analysis ,NEWS websites ,NEWSPAPERS ,RESEARCH methodology ,DATABASES - Abstract
News websites and databases have changed over the last 20 years, yet little is known about the type of news content studied and how the ways researchers access content have evolved. This paper aims to identify trends in news analysis studies by examining 216 print and online news analyses published in journalism and mass communication studies journals by U.S. authors between 2002 and 2020. Each publication was coded for their methodological attributes. Findings show most studies analyze text articles. Subscription-based news aggregator databases like LexisNexis, NewsBank/Access World News, ProQuest, and Factiva are the most popular resources to access news content, and there has been a statistically significant increase in the use of news websites and public databases. Librarians can use these findings to assess their news collections and advise researchers on resources to access news content for news research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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31. Philippine Free Higher Education News Reports: Corpus-Based Comparative Analysis of Seven English National Newspapers
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Carreon, Jonathan R. and Balinas, Elvira S.
- Abstract
Despite the heated debates on the implementation and its massive impact on the lives of Filipino people, only a dearth of research has been conducted to investigate the free college education project of the Duterte administration. Informed by corpus-based investigation of discourse, this paper critically compares news articles on the free college tuition discourse written by seven English online newspapers in the Philippines. The findings revealed that thematizing key public officials in the "Manila Times," "Philippine Daily Inquirer," and "Philippine Star" highlighted strong regard on the sources of information and the attribution of full authorial responsibility to information sources. "CNN" and "Rappler's" focus on educational institution news themes depicts the thematization of the indispensable role of key agencies as implementers and venues for implementing the free college education project and the indispensable stance of these public higher education institutions. The "Manila Bulletin" and the government-owned "Philippine News Agency's" strong rendition of free college tuition as a subject matter simply focused on state-of-affairs, where the absence of authorial sources may lower the credibility and trustworthiness of the news.
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- 2023
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32. Scout Rally at Birmingham and Imperial Scout Exhibition 1913: Polish Scouts
- Author
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Stepnik, Krzysztof
- Abstract
Scout Rally at Birmingham and Imperial Scout Exhibition organised in July of 1913 by the Boy Scouts Association constituted educational propaganda of the British Empire. The term "imperial", which was used in the British press, reflects the ideological meaning of this outsized event which gathered scouts from the United Kingdom and its dominions, and much smaller groups of scouts from Europe, including quite numerous groups from Poland. In the eyes of Poles, British "imperialism" or "patriotism" confronted as an ideal compared to Russian and German rule, and their attitudes were enthusiastically Anglomaniacal. This is the psychological key to understand the attractiveness of performing on the British arena for the representation of the young generation of Poles who were invited. For Polish scouts, the Scout Rally in Birmingham was an opportunity to demonstrate not only their skills but also patriotism as a function of political presence. This is how the Polish press understood these things, and which after the British -- what needs to be emphasised -- paid the most attention to the events in Birmingham. The most important Polish dailies publishing in Cracow, Warsaw, Poznan, and Lvov (now Lviv) closely followed the course of the rally, which was given the rank of success by a two-sentence "depeche" from London and a lengthy letter published in the "Czas" daily paper. The object of interest for the author of the article is the book written by the founder of Polish scouting, Andrzej Malkowski, which constitutes a noteworthy record of observations made by him during the Scout Rally as well as those made by other organisers of the Polish delegation's trip and of letters from journalists who accompanied this delegation and sent their correspondence to the Polish press from Birmingham, London, and Paris. Only one journalist broke out from apologetic opinions about the excellent performance of Polish scouts, who noticed shortcomings in performance and wrote about them. The article introduces the content of these letters and interprets and compares them. The opinion about the triumphant rally in Birmingham rooted firmly in Polish public opinion, constituting an important element of the founding myth of Polish scouting, which in the history of this movement is worth noting.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A Rising Tide of Discontent: Mediocrity, Meritocracy, and Neoliberalism in American Education, 1971-1983
- Author
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Chelsea A. Rodriguez and Sarah Van Ruyskensvelde
- Abstract
Mediocrity as a concept in education has frequently been used by modern-day and historical actors to express discontent with the status quo of pedagogy and schooling. Despite its pervasiveness in discourse, however, the concept has largely evaded academic scrutiny, particularly in terms of its historical development in the years leading up to its appearance in the famous United States Government report, "A Nation at Risk." This paper aims to construct a conceptual history of mediocrity in American education through the analysis of newspaper articles from "The New York Times," to explore how the concept developed amidst the rise of neoliberalism and meritocratic discourse in education. This study finds that the concept of mediocrity between 1971 and 1983 had a number of nuanced conceptualisations and played a pivotal role in developing meritocratic discourse on natural talent and ability, as well as neoliberal and marketised narratives in public debates over educational equality, business approaches to education, and performance pay for teachers. These findings allow educational researchers to reflect meaningfully on the ways that language shapes, and is shaped by, historical developments in education, and provides layers of meaning and context to oft-used educational concepts that are crucial for the authentic evaluation of our modern education systems.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Citizenship Education Policies and Immigration in Chile. A Dispositive Analysis
- Author
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Velásquez-Burgos, Rodrigo
- Abstract
In several countries where immigration influxes have changed or increased, citizenship education policies have been strengthened as a way to build social cohesion. In this paper, I took the case of Chile to explore citizenship education policies throughout their references towards immigration. Methodologically, I use the Foucauldian notion of dispositive as an analytical tool to explore the knowledge-power network that shapes citizenship education. I took samples of public opinions, educational documents and reports, and legal documents as part of the heterogeneity that shape the dispositive. These samples come from Chilean magazines, newspapers, and documents released by educational institutions as well as laws. Findings indicate that, if viewed from how it references immigration, the dispositive of citizen education in Chile works as a managerial dispositive of cultural differences; one that places immigrants themselves as commodities. In current neoliberal times, where capitalism multiplies differences and produces cultural commodities, citizenship education works as a technique of governing at a distance to administrate such differences.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Panic and Stoicism: Media, PISA and the Construction of Truth
- Author
-
Crome, Jennifer
- Abstract
In December 2019, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development released the latest results of its triennial Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) testing. What followed was a flurry of media reports in the participant countries about the 2018 PISA results that were interpretive rather than descriptive. Whilst there is a considerable body of literature describing PISA's impact on education policies, there are fewer studies that examine how PISA data is presented to the public by the media and how this contributes to the construction of policy truths. As part of a broader study of policy landscapes in the Asia Pacific region, this paper provides a critical analysis of the mediatisation of the 2018 PISA results in Australia and Singapore. It will be demonstrated that in Australia, much of the reporting was characterised by panic, whereas in Singapore the reporting was much more measured, exhibiting a stoicism. Drawing on a corpus of articles published in Australian and Singaporean newspapers in December 2019, and informed by the work of Michel Foucault, the analysis will make visible how dominant discourses used by the media operated as regimes of truth to advance neoliberal imperatives.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Vance Palmer: Establishing Labor Daily Newspapers, 1910–1916.
- Author
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Jordan, Deborah
- Subjects
WOMEN in war ,WORLD War I ,NEWSPAPERS ,INTERNET forums - Abstract
With the increasing success of New Journalism before World War 1, hopes for labour daily papers crystallised. This article speculates on four attempts to counter conservative media as seen through the youthful eyes of Vance Palmer. In London, he participated in the foundation of the successful labour paper the Daily Herald, and he wrote for the British Labour Party daily. Returning to Australia in 1912, he sought to work for a proposed Sydney-based daily paper, and for the successful Queensland's Labor Daily Standard, as a correspondent. When taking Palmer's observations into account—drawing on original material from his letters, and set in a context of comparing the four papers—a largely untold story of ambitious design emerges. The scheme of Commonwealth Labor daily newspapers across the nation still lacks its history. Cultural leadership through the commitment of leading men and women, even strike leaders, able to appeal to the passions of writers, editors and readers, and experienced staff utilising an inclusive forum inviting diverse and militant standpoints, may have proved more critical to riding the explosion of radical left idealism in the successful establishment of newspapers, and surviving the suppression of war, than managerial leadership or raising enough economic capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Representation of Germany’s Current Account in Newspaper Media.
- Author
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Maschke, Andreas
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,NEWSPAPERS ,COMPARATIVE literature ,CORPORATION reports - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Sport Culture & Science (IntJSCS) is the property of International Journal of Sport Culture & Science (IntJSCS) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
38. 'This is ridiculous – I need to start a paper...': An exploration of aims and intentions of regional print proprietors of post-COVID start-up newspapers.
- Author
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Barnes, Renee, Dugmore, Harry, English, Peter, Natoli, Rosanna, and Stephens, Elizabeth J
- Subjects
REGIONAL journalism ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,CORONAVIRUS diseases ,NEW business enterprises ,SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
In May 2020 at the height of Australia's first national COVID lockdown, NewsCorp Australia announced that more than 125 regional newspapers would either be closed or become available online-only. Queensland was hit hard with 22 regional and 20 community newspapers shifting to online formats, and 15 community newspapers closing. Yet within months of the NewsCorp changes, a significant number of new print newspapers were being announced to fill the 'news deserts'. Broadly welcomed by those in these local communities, the new publications suggest a reinvigoration of long-standing norms and tenets, many of which are specific to regional print news media, such as community-centred, locally-shaped news values and high reliance on 'micro-ads' (i.e. classifieds) and hyper-local business revenue. But given the dire prognostications about print business models, what are the aims and intentions of these start-ups (n = 22), and how do they translate their notions of community-centric news into business models they perceive as viable? Drawing on Hanitzsch and Vos framework for the discursive constructions of journalists' role in society, we find these newspaper start-ups both reassert and claim more vigorously the normative values associated with community journalism as 'social glue', while also developing 'lean start-up' business models that capitalise on the sense of a local newspaper's 'social good' functions through an affective rationale. We argue this represents a shift to a new 'hybrid' model, with strong elements of a traditional and still feisty monitorial news values fusing with a more 'morale-enhancing' and explicitly social cohesion-centric role conceptions. We call it a 'community cohesion model'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Untapped Potential? Exploring the 'Latent' Local Newspaper Reader in Digital Spaces.
- Author
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Hess, Kristy, Blakston, Angela, Lai, Jerry, McAdam, Alison, and Waller, Lisa
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,EVIDENCE gaps ,RURAL geography ,NEWSPAPERS ,PERCEIVED quality ,REGIONAL differences - Abstract
When it comes to understanding news audiences in rural areas, scholars often focus on declining readership and the challenge of how to encourage existing audiences to pay for content. There too has been burgeoning interest in news avoidance more broadly in digital spaces, with an emphasis on studying those who actively or intentionally resist or reject the news. This paper explores a gap in the research by seeking to understand the conditions and circumstances in which people who do not engage with their local news in print or digital format might be activated to do so. The paper presents the findings of an Australian survey of Facebook users who live in rural and regional areas and identify as people who do not engage with their local news. Findings highlight the need to conceptualise a subsection of the audience who express a desire to engage with their local news but perceive barriers to doing so. These barriers include cost, accessibility and perceived quality of content. We introduce the term 'latent' audience – potential news consumers who remain hidden from industry and scholarly view until changing conditions and circumstances lead to their manifestation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Historically Transvaluating Newspaper of the Colonial Rule.
- Author
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Mahmood, Anum and Tahir, Rafia
- Subjects
COLONIAL administration ,NEWSPAPERS ,BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947 ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,CARICATURE - Abstract
The research paper centers on the timeline of the newspapers from the pre-partition period to the creation of Pakistan. The paper focuses on the journey of newspapers of the sub-continent, ordinarily patronized by the Muslim leadership of the time. The research also focuses on the efforts and contributions led by eminent leadership during the foundational years. The culture of making a caricature was newly adopted during the rule of the British in the sub-continent. These earliest newspapers caricatured colonial India, produced human experience, and shaped colonial affect bringing renowned cartoonists, writer and poets associated themselves with the success of one of the earliest newspaper. From Punch to the Halal e Pakistan all have been deliberated in detail through this research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
41. An Overview of the 'Protecting Cantonese Movement' in Guangzhou (2010-2021)
- Author
-
Li, Yaling, Kang, Yeqin, Ding, Dan, and Zhang, Nianqing
- Abstract
A decade ago, an online survey resulted in the "Protecting Cantonese Movement" (PCM) in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, around which some articles were produced. Based on the bibliometric analysis of data retrieved from the "China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI)," the "Web of Science," and "Google" Scholar keyword searches during 2010 and 2021, this paper reviews the PCM literature to summarize its major features and general trends. It reveals that the published journals or newspaper articles focus on interpretating PCM, analyzing its causes from sociocultural, sociolinguistic, socioeconomic and media environmental perspectives, and proposing countermeasures and suggestions at political, ideological and sociolinguistic environmental levels. It concludes that PCM is of far-reaching significance to the continuous research ranging from Cantonese preserving, promotion of Mandarin, language planning, language policy, and language conflict to language ecology.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Schools in the Media: Framing National Standardized Testing in the Norwegian Press, 2004-2018
- Author
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Camphuijsen, Marjolein K. and Levatino, Antonina
- Abstract
In the education sector, media outlets have been increasingly active in reporting on standardized testing. The purpose of this paper is to identify the most recurrent discursive frames used by the Norwegian regional and local press when informing their readers about national standardized testing, and to explore whether differences over time and across geographical localities exist in the pervasiveness of frames. Our analysis is guided by framing theory, and builds on a corpus of 3,046 articles that focus on national testing, published by 155 Norwegian regional and local newspapers between 2004 and 2018. The analysis identifies four different discursive frames within Norwegian press coverage, namely the frame of 'performance', 'transparency and empowerment', 'misinterpretation and misuse', and 'criticism'. The four frames convey highly distinct causal and normative beliefs and realities about national standardized testing. While the dominance of the frames varies over time and across Norwegian counties, the frame of 'performance' is increasingly pervasive, something that potentially contributes to naturalize performative-oriented reporting and competition in education. The study highlights the importance of systematic media analyses to identify circulating principle beliefs on education, and of not limiting research to national newspapers in order to grasp geographical variation in media coverage.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. 'No True or Just Test of Merit': 'The Public School Record' 1886-1900
- Author
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Carter, Andy
- Abstract
'School league tables' summarising the performance of secondary schools in England have been published annually since 1992. Although now a firmly established feature of the educational landscape, they have attracted criticism from those who point to their unintended negative consequences. These include 'teaching to the test', entering pupils for easier examinations, and resitting examinations multiple times in order to massage success rates. However, neither the concept of league tables, nor these alleged side-effects are new. Between 1886 and 1900, a series of London newspapers published rudimentary tables that attempted to rank and compare schools based on performance. Initially conceived as an exercise in investigating whether leading public schools really provided educational value, and against a background of political conflict over elite classical education, they provoked intense debate over how to judge the quality of secondary education in late Victorian Britain. This paper examines their short history.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Social Imaginaries of Violence and Fear: The Chilean Press and the 1968 Global Student Movement
- Author
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Toro-Blanco, Pablo
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the construction of social imaginaries of fear by the Chilean press regarding student violence during the 1968 university reforming process. Using an approach inspired by the history of emotions, the primary purpose is to analyze the discourse of two relevant conservative newspapers with national circulation about students' mobilization. Design/methodology/approach: The research rests on the analysis of content in the discourse of the two more representative right-wing Chilean newspapers ("El Mercurio" and "El Diario Ilustrado"). Founded in the early years of the 20th century, both had national circulations and were a part of a tradition in the history of the Chilean 20th-century national press. Through the analysis of a selection of editorials and news regarding students' mobilization during 1968, with a focus on the experience of the most prominent institution (Universidad de Chile), this research highlights similarities and differences in the ways that both media endeavoured to elaborate social imaginaries of menace and fear regarding student movements. Findings: Through the study of the discourse of traditional newspapers, it is possible to identify critical issues concerning the university student movements' purposes to implement breaking (and occasionally violent) methods to carry out the reforms that they promoted, according to the right-wing press. Against this backdrop, the different importance of an anti-communist component is discernible, typical of the Cold War period, in the (political and emotional) arguments of the newspapers under analysis. Originality/value: This article proposes an interpretation that intertwines a local phenomenon (the reformist movement of the University of Chile) with a global one (the May student revolution of 1968). It also establishes a novel approach by linking, through its approach, yet traditional concepts of social and cultural analysis (the idea of social imaginaries) with a new emphasis on social science and humanities (emotional dimensions).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fewer newspapers means good news for corrupt public officials: results from a US panel data study.
- Author
-
Swaleheen, Mushfiq and Borgia, Daniel
- Subjects
PUBLIC officers ,POLITICAL corruption ,NEWSPAPERS ,FREEDOM of the press ,READERSHIP ,ATTRIBUTION of news - Abstract
Purpose: When there is freedom of press, newspapers provide prying eyes that investigate and report the malfeasance by public officials. More prying eyes together with more newspaper readership make monitoring of public officials by the public easier and cheaper. This paper aims to investigate the role of newspapers in helping the public observe the conduct of local officials fearful of discovery of malfeasance by the newspaper readers in the USA during 1978 – 2008 when the internet was still a fledgling source of news. Design/methodology/approach: A model that recognize that corruption is an agency problem that thrives in the absence of monitoring of public officials is used. The estimation technique used address problems issuing from the subjective nature of measures of press freedom and perception of corruption, and the persistence of corruption over time. Findings: More newspapers and newspaper readers help to alleviate the agency problem that underlies public corruption in the USA and elsewhere. More newspapers (i.e. more journalists) act to deter corruption at the margin, and, ceteris paribus, higher readership works on exposing corrupt acts and helps to convict the errant officials in larger numbers. Research limitations/implications: The paper provides a timely context to consider the implication of sharp fall in local newspapers as well as newspaper readership all across the USA. Originality/value: This paper extends the literature by considering press freedom, the number of newspapers and size of newspaper readership as joint determinants of public corruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Banal placemaking: spatial conceptions in an Icelandic provincial newspaper in the 1880s.
- Author
-
Gustafsson, Harald
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,URBANIZATION ,NINETEENTH century ,PROVINCES - Abstract
Drawing theoretic inspiration from the spatial turn within humanities, this article attempts to develop methods for studying placemaking in news media. This is done by a case study of the newspaper Þjóðviljinn, published in Ísafjörður, Iceland, in the late nineteenth century. The concept 'banal placemaking' is suggested for the kinds of spatial conceptions that occur in the paper without the explicit aim of creating an image of a place. When reading the paper in this way, a multitude of places and counter-places occur in the text. The town is contrasted with the countryside, the region with Reykjavík, and Iceland with Denmark. Icelandic spatial conceptions changed with urbanization and the coming of new regional centres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Using Digitized Newspapers to Address Measurement Error in Historical Data.
- Author
-
Ferrara, Andreas, Ha, Joung Yeob, and Walsh, Randall
- Subjects
MEASUREMENT errors ,HISTORICAL errors ,NEWSPAPERS ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This paper shows how to remove attenuation bias in regression analyses due to measurement error in historical data for a given variable of interest by using a secondary measure that can be easily generated from digitized newspapers. We provide three methods for using this secondary variable to deal with non-classical measurement error in a binary treatment: set identification, bias reduction via sample restriction, and a parametric bias correction. We demonstrate the usefulness of our methods by replicating four recent economic history papers. Relative to the initial analyses, our results yield markedly larger coefficient estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. NEWSPAPER WOOD: A NEW MATERIAL USING PAPER TO MAKE WOOD.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *WOOD , *NEWSPAPERS - Published
- 2021
49. The Sunday paper: a media history.
- Author
-
Saunders, R. L.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,NONFICTION - Published
- 2023
50. What Makes News Newsworthy: An Experimental Test of Where a News Story Is Published (or Not) and Its Perceived Newsworthiness.
- Author
-
Hassell, Hans J. G.
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS - Abstract
Previous research has attributed media convergence to, among other things, where the news was originally published. That research, however, has struggled to identify causal relationships between a news item's publication in a particular outlet and journalists' perceptions of a story's newsworthiness. This relationship is difficult to identify because of the correlation between publication in a particular outlet and many other factors that also impact newsworthiness. This paper uses an experiment embedded within a survey of over 1,500 U.S. political journalists to test the impact of a news story's previous publication history on journalists' views of the newsworthiness of that news item. Compared with previously unpublished stories, the publication of a news story in a national paper has no significant positive effect on the perceived newsworthiness of a story. The origin of a story in a local outlet, however, causes journalists to perceive that story to be less newsworthy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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