8 results on '"Aharoni, Tali"'
Search Results
2. Seeing into the future: Anchoring strategies in future-oriented Twitter visuals.
- Author
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Amit-Danhi, Eedan and Aharoni, Tali
- Subjects
VISUAL communication ,PUBLIC spaces ,SOCIAL context ,CONSUMERISM ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
How do public actors visualize the future? Mediations of the future often construct audiences’ prospective actions, and offer insights into society’s imagination of desirable and undesirable futures. In the visually-saturated environment of social media, projections are often visual. Unlike their textual counterparts, future-oriented election visuals have remained understudied. Thus, our paper explores how public actors substantiate their future-oriented, multi-modal claims and the rhetorical outcomes of different strategies. Building on the notion of technologies’ “temporal affordances”, we utilize an inductive qualitative approach to visual rhetoric and analyze projection anchoring strategies using a sample of 400 future-oriented multi-modal tweets. We find that anchoring is carried out in two layers: evidential (the validity of the future-oriented narrative), and visual (the level of aesthetic realism in the image). Examining recurring patterns of anchoring strategies across the sample result in a rhetorical typology of future-oriented visuals, in two modes (consumerism and competition). Overall, our findings highlight the rhetorical pliability of visual anchoring, through which actors utilize an interplay of temporal and technological strategies to generate alternative anchoring in sharing their projections, and to remain authentic in visualizing the unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Serial Focus Groups: A Longitudinal Design for Studying Interactive Discourse
- Author
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Baden, Christian, Pasitselska, Olga, Aharoni, Tali, and Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren
- Subjects
Education - Abstract
Focus group methods specialize in the analysis of interactive discourse, but are only rarely employed as a stand-alone method to study such phenomena, owing to inherent limitations concerning the comparability and generalizability of findings. In this paper, we argue that focus groups undergo three kinds of transformations, involving changes in participants’ cognitive states, social ties, and discursive behavior, which raise both analytic challenges and valuable opportunities for the study of shared meanings and interactive negotiation processes in society. Introducing Serial Focus Groups, we extend familiar focus group designs as a method for studying interactive discourse in a longitudinal perspective, capitalizing on the analytic potentials raised by these transformations. Reviewing the methodological literature and drawing upon two large-scale focus group studies of socially interactive sense-making, we argue that serial focus groups can help overcome some of the limitations of cross-sectional focus groups and offer valuable new opportunities for analysis and validation.
- Published
- 2022
4. 'Seeing' into the future: A typology of future-oriented election visuals on Twitter
- Author
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Amit-Danhi, Eedan and Aharoni, Tali
- Abstract
Paper presented at the 71st Annual Conference of the International Communication Association.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dynamics of (dis)trust between the news media and their audience: The case of the April 2019 Israeli exit polls
- Author
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Aharoni, Tali, Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren, Baden, Christian, and Overbeck, Maximilian
- Subjects
Communication ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,050801 communication & media studies ,16. Peace & justice ,0506 political science ,0508 media and communications ,5. Gender equality ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Television channel ,Dynamics (music) ,Political science ,Public discourse ,050602 political science & public administration ,Election coverage, exit polls, media ritual, public discourse, trust & distrust ,News media - Abstract
This paper explores the dynamics of (dis)trust among experts, journalists, and audiences through the case study of an inaccurate exit poll aired on a leading Israeli television channel. It combines empirical data from the Israeli April 2019 elections with a conceptual view of exit polls as both sources of information and national rituals to address public discourse on the polls and its underlying suspicions. A multi-method approach yielded a corpus consisting of focus groups with citizens, in-depth semi-structured interviews with journalists, pollsters and experts, and qualitative textual analysis of news reports. Using inductive-qualitative analysis, we identified three types of public narratives, each casting blame for the erroneous exit poll projection on a different type of actor. The statistical and biased-media narratives tally with declining trust in the news media and assume misbehavior by pollsters and news creators respectively. The deception narrative, on the other hand, suggests that right-wing voters systematically sabotaged the exit poll projections. By extending trust beyond journalistic information, this narrative foregrounds the cultural meaning of election night rituals. Taken together, the narratives found in this study delineate (dis)trust as an interplay of active participants in the creation, reception, and interpretation of news. Our findings thus touch upon key attitudes towards both media and democracy and have implications for further studies on collective rituals and information evaluations in an era of eroding trust.
- Published
- 2020
6. Serial Focus Groups: A Longitudinal Design for Studying Interactive Discourse
- Author
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Baden, Christian, primary, Pasitselska, Olga, additional, Aharoni, Tali, additional, and Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Dynamics of (dis)trust between the news media and their audience: The case of the April 2019 Israeli exit polls
- Author
-
Aharoni, Tali, Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren, Baden, Christian, and Overbeck, Maximilian
- Subjects
5. Gender equality ,16. Peace & justice ,Election coverage, exit polls, media ritual, public discourse, trust & distrust - Abstract
This paper explores the dynamics of (dis)trust among experts, journalists, and audiences through the case study of an inaccurate exit poll aired on a leading Israeli television channel. It combines empirical data from the Israeli April 2019 elections with a conceptual view of exit polls as both sources of information and national rituals to address public discourse on the polls and its underlying suspicions. A multi-method approach yielded a corpus consisting of focus groups with citizens, in-depth semi-structured interviews with journalists, pollsters and experts, and qualitative textual analysis of news reports. Using inductive-qualitative analysis, we identified three types of public narratives, each casting blame for the erroneous exit poll projection on a different type of actor. The statistical and biased-media narratives tally with declining trust in the news media and assume misbehavior by pollsters and news creators respectively. The deception narrative, on the other hand, suggests that right-wing voters systematically sabotaged the exit poll projections. By extending trust beyond journalistic information, this narrative foregrounds the cultural meaning of election night rituals. Taken together, the narratives found in this study delineate (dis)trust as an interplay of active participants in the creation, reception, and interpretation of news. Our findings thus touch upon key attitudes towards both media and democracy and have implications for further studies on collective rituals and information evaluations in an era of eroding trust.  
8. Dynamics of (dis)trust between the news media and their audience: The case of the April 2019 Israeli exit polls
- Author
-
Aharoni, Tali, Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren, Baden, Christian, and Overbeck, Maximilian
- Subjects
Election coverage, exit polls, media ritual, public discourse, trust & distrust ,16. Peace & justice - Abstract
This paper explores the dynamics of (dis)trust among experts, journalists, and audiences through the case study of an inaccurate exit poll aired on a leading Israeli television channel. It combines empirical data from the Israeli April 2019 elections with a conceptual view of exit polls as both sources of information and national rituals to address public discourse on the polls and its underlying suspicions. A multi-method approach yielded a corpus consisting of focus groups with citizens, in-depth semi-structured interviews with journalists, pollsters and experts, and qualitative textual analysis of news reports. Using inductive-qualitative analysis, we identified three types of public narratives, each casting blame for the erroneous exit poll projection on a different type of actor. The statistical and biased-media narratives tally with declining trust in the news media and assume misbehavior by pollsters and news creators respectively. The deception narrative, on the other hand, suggests that right-wing voters systematically sabotaged the exit poll projections. By extending trust beyond journalistic information, this narrative foregrounds the cultural meaning of election night rituals. Taken together, the narratives found in this study delineate (dis)trust as an interplay of active participants in the creation, reception, and interpretation of news. Our findings thus touch upon key attitudes towards both media and democracy and have implications for further studies on collective rituals and information evaluations in an era of eroding trust., The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/ or publication of this article: This study is funded by ERC Starting Grant 802990 (PROFECI). Author Biographies Tali Aharoni is a PhD student at the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her research interests include journalistic production, news audiences, social media, trust, and the various intersections of media and psychology. Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt is an Associate Professor at the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her research is in the fields of journalism and political communication, with a particular interest in the temporal dimensions of journalism and the role played by the news media in constructing and negotiating collective pasts and futures. She is leading the ERC-funded project "Mediating the Future: The Social Dynamics of Public Projections" (PROFECI). Christian Baden is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on the collaborative construction of meaning in controversial public debates, combining political communication and journalism research with the study of discourse, framing and sense-making. Maximilian Overbeck is a post-doctoral researcher at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem at the Department of Communication and Journalism. He does research at the intersection of International Relations, Communication Studies, and Sociology, analyzing complex theoretical concepts through the combination of qualitative and quantitative-computational research methods. In his research, he focuses on the political role of religious beliefs and identities within Western democracies and public spheres.
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