Understanding Global News: A Critical IntroductionSAGE, 1997 M12 8 - 256 pages A lively and critical introduction to the news media, this book has been written specifically for media students and trainee journalists. Understanding Global News invites the reader to explore contemporary journalistic practice, and questions the assumption that the media provide a mere window on the world. Challenging the often unquestioned notions of media objectivity, the author turns the classic questions: Who? What? When? and Why? onto the news media. By employing a range of theoretical perspectives and a large variety of examples, the author demonstrates the way in which our perceptions of the world are constructed by the news media. |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... fact is not so much that they make mistakes but which particular mistakes they make and how these mistakes vary with nationality and personal history. Dutch students render their own country in a very characteristic shape. They are ...
... fact is not so much that they make mistakes but which particular mistakes they make and how these mistakes vary with nationality and personal history. Dutch students render their own country in a very characteristic shape. They are ...
Page 9
... fact it includes many of the countries and populations which we tend to place in the 'Southern hemisphere'. Mentally, we have moved the Equator — the Great Divide - up by thirty degrees or more. In recent years, Northern European policy ...
... fact it includes many of the countries and populations which we tend to place in the 'Southern hemisphere'. Mentally, we have moved the Equator — the Great Divide - up by thirty degrees or more. In recent years, Northern European policy ...
Page 11
... fact subject to armed conflict. After the anti-Westem Ayatollah Khomeini took over, the prefix 'Persian' was often intuitively dropped in the Western media and only 'the Gulf' was left. When Iran and Iraq subsequently got into a full ...
... fact subject to armed conflict. After the anti-Westem Ayatollah Khomeini took over, the prefix 'Persian' was often intuitively dropped in the Western media and only 'the Gulf' was left. When Iran and Iraq subsequently got into a full ...
Page 13
... fact, many people who are not considered 100 per cent white are often automatically considered 100 per cent black. Although a 'white' who has spent a day on the beach may be more 'coloured' than someone like the American general Colin ...
... fact, many people who are not considered 100 per cent white are often automatically considered 100 per cent black. Although a 'white' who has spent a day on the beach may be more 'coloured' than someone like the American general Colin ...
Page 15
... facts'. They forget that the word fact stems from the Latin word facere or making. In this sense, all observed and reported facts are artefacts: they are wo/manmade. There are no facts which speak for themselves. They are made to say ...
... facts'. They forget that the word fact stems from the Latin word facere or making. In this sense, all observed and reported facts are artefacts: they are wo/manmade. There are no facts which speak for themselves. They are made to say ...
Contents
1 | |
22 | |
41 | |
Chapter 4 Who are Journalists and How do They Work? | 65 |
Chapter 5 Who Gets to Speak in the World News? | 85 |
Chapter 6 When Does Something Become World News? | 109 |
Chapter 7 Where does World News Come From? | 127 |
Chapter 8 How are News Messages Formulated? | 144 |
Chapter 9 How do Images Come About? | 166 |
Chapter 10 What Effects do the Media Have? | 190 |
us We and Them | 206 |
Studying Global Media | 216 |
Bibliography | 228 |
Index | 235 |
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Common terms and phrases
advertising Africa agencies American analysis audience broadcasting camera caning in Singapore cent centre Chapter claims colour communication conflict construction continually correspondents countries coverage cultural defined definition discourse dominant dozen economic editors élite ethnic ethnocentrism Eurocentric Europe European everyday example fact fiction field films financial first foreign frame French Ginneken global groups identified ideological images individual instance intercultural International Herald Tribune journalism journalists labels language Latin America leaders limited number look magazines major Western mass media media markets million moral panic news-gathering newspapers Newspeak Nicaragua objective official pack journalism particularly perspective picture political problems produced professional pseudo-events quoted reality reporters role selective articulation sense Singapore social society sources specific stereotypes stories television tend things Third World transcontinental media usually values various Washington Post Western media whereas world-view