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Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
Journal Prestige (SJR): 1.484 ![]() Citation Impact (citeScore): 2 Number of Followers: 28 ![]() ISSN (Print) 1077-6990 - ISSN (Online) 2161-430X Published by Sage Publications ![]() |
- Information Literacy in the Age of Disinformation
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Authors: Daniela Dimitrova
Pages: 365 - 367
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Volume 99, Issue 2, Page 365-367, June 2022.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-06T11:05:02Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100775
Issue No: Vol. 99, No. 2 (2022)
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- Book Review: Climate Change and Journalism: Negotiating Rifts of Time, by
Thomas J. Hrach-
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Authors: Thomas J. Hrach
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-16T01:37:26Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221104153
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- On Commemorating Hrant Dink: Affective Nationalism, Hate Speech, and
Digital News Media Users-
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Authors: Alptug Okten
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This article focuses on the digital reproduction of hate speech. It investigates the normalization of affective nationalistic discourses via user comments posted on digital news media websites. I analyze digital posts concerning the murder in Turkey of Hrant Dink, a well-known Turkish Armenian journalist, on the websites of the two most popular Turkish newspapers. This examination considers readers’ comments on the day of the murder, January 19, 2007, and the annual commemorations over the subsequent 6 years. Based on my findings, I argue that nationalistic rhetoric is normalized via six discourses of othering: militarization, identity, us versus them, blaming, rejection, and indifference. Furthermore, I demonstrate how users repurpose online comment sections to reproduce notions of inferential racism by producing affective nationalism vis-à-vis Armenian–Turkish relations.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-16T01:36:27Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221093920
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- Book Review : Seeing Justice: Witnessing, Crime, and Punishment in Visual
Media, by Mary Angela Black-
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Authors: Douglas C. MacLeod
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-16T01:13:47Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100516
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- Book Review: Journalism, Data and Technology in Latin America, by Ramón
Salaverría and Mathias-Felipe de-Lima-Santos (Eds.) and The Data
Journalism Handbook: Towards a Critical Data Practice, by Liliana Bounegru
and Jonathan Gray (Eds.)-
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Authors: Marília Gehrke
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-16T01:13:10Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100520
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- Don’t Throw the Frame Out With the Bathwater: How Episodic News Frames
Can Prevent Identity-Motivated Reasoning-
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Authors: Ming M. Boyer, Sophie Lecheler, Loes Aaldering
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Framing research has predominantly revealed detrimental effects of episodic news frames, including individualist blame attributions and political cynicism. However, such frames may also discourage group biases and impede motivated reasoning regarding identity politics. In two experiments (N = 815; N = 1,019), we test the effect of episodic frames on group-consonant attitudes through identity-motivated reasoning. The two studies produce mixed results. Episodic frames might decrease gender-motivated reasoning for women with weaker gender identities when news threatens their identity, but not for men or for women with stronger gender identities. The implications for journalism and democracy are discussed.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-09T04:34:55Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221097057
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- Who Covers the Qualifications of Female Candidates' Examining Gender
Bias in News Coverage Across National and Local Newspapers-
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Authors: Nichole M. Bauer
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This article examines differences in news coverage of female candidates using a media sociology framework that examines the interplay between organizational, routine, and individual levels of influence. The analyses find that national and local newspapers are more likely to write about the political qualifications of female candidates relative to male candidates, and female journalists at local newspapers are most likely to write about women’s political qualifications. Female candidates receive more feminine stereotypic coverage across newspapers, especially in all-women elections. These results uncover important differences across media organizations that affect how female candidates develop their campaign strategies and voter decision-making.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-08T07:02:21Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100514
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- The Role of Channel Selection and Communication Transparency in Enhancing
Employee Commitment to Change-
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Authors: Linjuan Rita Men, Marlene S. Neill, Cen April Yue, Aniisu K Verghese
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This study examined how the organizations’ use of mediated and interpersonal channels during change affects employees’ change-related outcomes. Specifically, the study proposed and tested a conceptual model that links organizations’ frequency of use of communication channels to perceived organizational communication transparency during change, employees’ feeling of uncertainty toward change, and employee affective commitment to change. Through an online survey of 1,034 employees who had experienced an organizational planned change in the United States, results showed that organizations’ frequent use of mass-mediated channels and interpersonal channels both positively influenced employees’ perception of communication transparency during change, with interpersonal channels showing stronger impact than mediated channels. Perceived change communication transparency negatively influenced employee uncertainty about change and positively influenced employee affective commitment to change. Perceived communication transparency during change mediated the effects of the organizations’ use of communication channels on employees’ uncertainty about change and affective commitment to change.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-08T02:01:02Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100518
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- How News Audiences Allocate Trust in the Digital Age: A Figuration
Perspective-
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Authors: Frank Mangold, Marko Bachl, Fabian Prochazka
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
The article enriches the understanding of trust in news at a time when mass and interpersonal communication have merged in the digital sphere. We propose disentangling individual-level patterns of trust allocation (i.e., trust figurations) across journalistic media, social media, and peers to reflect the multiplicity among modern news audiences. A latent class analysis of a representative survey among German young adults revealed four figurations: traditionalists, indifferentials, optimists, and cynics. Political characteristics and education corresponded with substantial heterogeneity in individuals’ trust in news sources, their inclination to differentiate between sources, and the ways of integrating trust in journalistic and non-journalistic sources.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-06-03T05:34:32Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221100515
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- A Matter of Perspective: An Experimental Study on Potentials of
Constructive Journalism for Communicating a Crisis-
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Authors: Svenja Schäfer, Hannah Greber, Michael Sülflow, Sophie Lecheler
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Restorative narratives describe a new form of journalism that attempts to overcome the detrimental effects of the more prevalent negative and destructive tone of news coverage. This study investigates the potentials and risks of restorative narratives in the coverage of crises with a 2 (restorative/negative) × 2 (COVID-19/climate crisis) experimental online study (n = 829) for emotional, cognitive, evaluative, and behavioral outcomes. For both crises, results demonstrate that restorative narratives evoked more positive emotional reactions to the news, were more likely to be endorsed, and improved quality ratings of the news article compared with negative narratives. We found no effects for elaboration and information-seeking.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-17T04:53:53Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221095751
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- What Constitutes Disinformation' Disinformation Judgment, Influence of
Partisanship, and Support for Anti-Disinformation Legislation-
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Authors: Francis L. F. Lee
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This study examines people’s judgment of what constitutes disinformation, how partisanship shapes such judgment, and how broadness of disinformation judgment relates to perceptions of the disinformation problem and support for anti-disinformation legislation. Analysis of a Hong Kong survey shows that many citizens are willing to treat a wide range of problematic news materials as disinformation. Partisans tend to treat counter-attitudinal materials as disinformation, but the influence of partisanship can be reduced by the norm of evenhandedness. Besides, broadness of disinformation judgment—especially anti-government disinformation judgment—relates positively with the perceived severity and impact of disinformation and support for legislation.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-17T04:51:51Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221093940
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- Moderation Effects of Language Skills, Residential Tenure, and Education
on Immigrants’ Learning From News-
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Authors: Yulia S. Medvedeva, Glenn M. Leshner
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Authors of the knowledge gap hypothesis predicted television’s potential to narrow the gaps in some circumstances. This online experiment aimed to bound the conditions that facilitate the leveling role of audiovisual news for a foreign-born audience (N = 137) residing in the United States. Results showed that audiovisual news narrowed the gaps by improving learning for those who scored low on language or U.S. education and by attenuating improvements in learning for those with high language or education scores. Conversely, text news widened the gaps by sizable gains in learning for those with better language or more education.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-17T04:50:31Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221093930
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- Communicating Cultism in the Media: Discursive Sense-Giving of Cult Status
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Authors: Kyle A. Hammonds, Michael W. Kramer
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
The term cult has been variously applied to contemporary groups and organizations, marking them as unusual or frightening. Scholarly literature has yet to settle on a concrete conceptualization of cults and reveals little about the communicative processes by which the stigmatizing name becomes attached to certain groups. This study utilizes a constant comparison method to assess qualities associated with groups regularly labeled as cults in the popular press. Results establish a typology of qualities associated with a “cult genre” of speech and illuminate the role of popular narrative in socially constructing stigma.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-17T04:48:55Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221088762
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- The Process of Online Keyword Activism in Political Figure’s Crisis:
Moderating Roles of Like-Minded Public Opinion and Government
Controllability of Crisis Outcomes-
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Authors: Sora Kim, Yingru Ji, Hyejoon Rim
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Using a national online survey in South Korea, this study examines the underlying psychological mechanisms of online keyword activism in supporting a politician. Findings show that when perceived like-minded opinion is extremely negative toward the politician, the like-minded opinion perception mitigates the effects of perceived majority opinion on crisis blame attribution and pro-politician activism. Government controllability intensifies the effects crisis blame has on pro-politician activism when it is extremely low. What drives more pro-politician activism is their perception of like-minded opinion through blaming external parties; what makes people refrain from pro-politician activism is their perception of low government controllability through blaming the politician.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-10T06:25:29Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221095741
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- Book Review: Conservative Political Communication: How Right-Wing Media
and Messaging (Re)Made American Politics-
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Authors: Josh C. Bramlett
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-05-03T05:15:05Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221092308
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- The “Price You Pay” and the “Badge of Honor”: Journalists, Gender,
and Harassment-
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Authors: Kaitlin C. Miller
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This article utilizes theoretical concepts of sensemaking and affective events theory to analyze and interpret what type of harassment events journalists experience from readers, viewers, and strangers, and their subsequent emotional responses. Findings indicated journalists experience three forms of harassment at work from those external to the newsroom, and that women not only receive more sexual harassment than men, but they experience more overall harassment, from viewers, readers, and strangers. When examining affective reactions, men say they experience emotions of anger when harassed. Women, however, noted emotions of anger when experiencing sexual harassment, and emotions of fear when experiencing incivility and disruptive harassment and personally attacking harassment.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-23T05:43:36Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221088761
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- Engaging Employees in CEO Activism: The Role of Transparent Leadership
Communication in Making a Social Impact-
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Authors: Yi Grace Ji, Cheng Hong
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
With a survey of 600 U.S. employees, this study investigated the effect of transparent leadership communication on employee engagement, from the interpretivist approach, in the context of CEO activism. This study examined employees’ perceived psychological needs (i.e., autonomy, competence, and relatedness) as mediators. Results showed that transparent leadership communication is positively associated with employees’ psychological needs. In turn, employees’ psychological needs mediate the impact of transparent leadership communication on employees’ information sharing and activism participation intentions in a CEO activism campaign. Ultimately, this study discussed theoretical and managerial contributions.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-06T01:04:46Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221086977
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- Child Immigrant Detention: Spokesperson Key Messages, Engineered Frames,
and Cultural Rules-
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Authors: María E. Len-Ríos
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Public relations professionals engineer acceptability for policy, such as child immigrant detention, through key messages. Agenda building, engineered frames, and rules theories guide study of spokesperson attributions from 221 articles from January 2017 to October 2019. Findings show attributions to U.S. government spokespersons appeared most in stories. Journalist inquiries were declined at times by spokespersons citing legal and privacy arguments. While all spokespersons addressed the vulnerability of detained children, government spokespersons framed adult immigrant criminality as causing children harm. Opinion polls show government efforts to present child detention as a law-and-order issue appears to clash with cultural rules that value child well-being.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-02T11:31:14Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221082158
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- Book Review: Information at War: Journalism, Disinformation, and Modern
Warfare-
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Authors: Yixin Chen, Tingting Hu
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-01T04:42:28Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221086976
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- Book Review: Artificial Intelligence in Cultural Production: Critical
Perspectives on Digital Platforms-
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Authors: Guodong Jiang, Ying Zhang
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-31T12:30:58Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221085519
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- Highlighting Incivility: How the News Media’s Focus on Political
Incivility Affects Political Trust and News Credibility-
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Authors: Ine Goovaerts
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Previous research showed that political trust declines when politicians debate in uncivil ways. This article extends this research by analyzing how the news media’s tendency to focus on and even overstate incivility in post-debate coverage affects political trust and the news media’s own credibility. The results of two preregistered survey experiments show that politicians’ use of incivility decreases their perceived trustworthiness. The effects of incivility-focused news coverage on politicians’ perceived trustworthiness are more mixed with one experiment revealing a negative effect and one revealing no significant effect. Both experiments furthermore show that incivility-focused coverage decreases the news media’s own credibility.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-31T12:29:58Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221084608
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- How Misinformation and Rebuttals in Online Comments Affect People’s
Intention to Receive COVID-19 Vaccines: The Roles of Psychological
Reactance and Misperceptions-
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Authors: Yanqing Sun, Fangcao Lu
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This study investigated how exposure to negative and misleading online comments about the COVID-19 vaccination persuasive messages and the ensuing corrective rebuttals of these comments affected people’s attitudes and intentions regarding vaccination. An online experiment was performed with 344 adults in the United States. The results showed that rebuttals by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, rather than those by social media users, indirectly increased people’s willingness to receive the vaccine by reducing their psychological reactance to persuasive messages and their belief in the misinformation contained in the comments. Rebuttals by social media users became more effective in reducing reactance when people initially had stronger pro-vaccination attitudes.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-31T12:28:36Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221084606
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- Guarding the Firewall: How Political Journalists Distance Themselves From
the Editorial Endorsement Process-
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Authors: Gregory Perreault, Volha Kananovich, Ella Hackett
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Through a lens of boundary work and role conception, this study seeks to understand how political journalists discursively construct the role of the newspaper editorial endorsement. Researchers conducted long-form interviews with political journalists in the United States (n = 64) to understand how journalists conducted boundary work relative to endorsements. Journalists argued that the 2016 election was a decisive event in which political news endorsements lost their original objective. Political journalists described laboring to discursively distance themselves from the endorsement process and viewed political endorsements not only as ineffective, but also as jeopardizing their news organizations’ independence.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-28T05:33:40Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221084609
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- Book Review: Engineering Hollywood: Technology, Technicians, and the
Science of Building the Studio System-
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Authors: James C. Foust
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-18T01:14:44Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221084612
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- Visually Framing Disasters: Humanitarian Aid Organizations’ Use of
Visuals on Social Media-
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Authors: Sun Young Lee, JungKyu Rhys Lim, Duli Shi
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
The present study seeks to systematically describe how humanitarian aid organizations use visuals in their natural disaster-related social media messages and to analyze their effects on social media engagement. Using Rodriguez and Dimitrova’s (2011) four levels of visual framing, we performed a content analysis of 810 tweets from 38 aid organizations. The results showed that, overall, the organizations’ visuals had an emphasis on victims and on disaster relief efforts. The most effective types of visual framing, however, were not those the aid organizations most commonly used. We discuss the theoretical and practical implications.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-09T06:41:01Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221081046
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- Book Review: Global Journalism: Understanding World Media Systems, by
Daniela V. Dimitrova (Ed.)-
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Authors: Alexa Robertson
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-09T06:37:40Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221081045
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- Book Review: Normalizing Mental Illness and Neurodiversity in
Entertainment Media: Quieting the Madness, by Malynnda Johnson and
Christopher J. Olson (Eds.)-
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Authors: Lesa Hatley Major
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-09T06:37:21Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221077681
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- Book Review: Imagined Audiences: How Journalists Perceive and Pursue the
Public, by Jacob L. Nelson-
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Authors: Robin Blom
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-09T06:36:54Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221081040
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- “I Can’t Just Pull a Woman Out of a Hat”: A Mixed-Methods Study on
Journalistic Drivers of Women’s Representation in Political News-
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Authors: Andreas A. Riedl, Tobias Rohrbach, Christina Krakovsky
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
While the persisting issue of women’s underrepresentation in political news partly arises from biases in the social reality, journalism plays a crucial role in mediating these biases. This study proposes a multilayered framework of gendered influences in journalistic news production to understand how journalistic factors exacerbate or mitigate women’s media representation. Drawing from a mixed-methods design (content analysis, survey, interviews), journalists’ own gender emerges as the strongest predictor of gendered representations. Women’s underrepresentation is also influenced by professional roles but not by organizations’ gender guidelines. We explore how journalists perceive these influences and discuss conceptual and practical implications.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-03-03T12:08:20Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211073454
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- Book Review: The Voice Catchers
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Authors: Valeria Resendez
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-02-22T12:58:07Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221077382
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- Book Review: The Digital Disconnect: The Social Causes and Consequences of
Digital Inequalities-
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Authors: Kevin Keenan
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-02-17T05:01:42Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221075778
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- Asian American Influencer Cultural Identity Portrayal on Instagram
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Authors: Jesse King, Leah Fretwell
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Social media provides minority groups with more control over their portrayals than stereotypical misrepresentations of Hollywood. To understand how Asian Americans are negotiating their own ethnic, racial, and national identities on social media, constant comparative analysis was employed to examine patterns in visual and textual communication of Asian American influencers’ Instagram posts. Their cultural identities were communicated as a cultural hybridity, which included the use of Asian, American/Western, and Asian American cultural values, products, and behaviors. This study indicates that multicultural identity analysis can be applied to visual texts, and Instagram can provide fluid, authentic representations of identity.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-02-17T04:49:17Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221077352
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- Dynamics of Networked Framing: Automated Frame Analysis of Government
Media and the Public on Weibo With Pandemic Big Data-
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Authors: Xinyan Zhao, Xiaohui Wang
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Networked framing focuses on how the public becomes gatekeepers on social media. To unpack the dynamics of networked framing, we conducted an automated frame analysis to identify the shift of frame structures of government media (N = 12,090) and the public (N = 1.49 million) on Weibo during the COVID-19 pandemic. We found a moderate level of frame alignment between government media and the public, with high divergence observed during the pandemic’s initial stage. The public challenged government media frames by deploying unique frame functions and creating new frames, but their frame network was fragmented relative to that of government media, which constructed a cohesive network of frames to enhance discursive control.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-02-04T04:34:34Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211072508
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- Book Review: Beyond Fake News: Finding the Truth in a World of
Misinformation, by Justin P. McBrayer and Disinformation and Fake News, by
Shashi Jayakumar, Benjamin Ang, and Nur Diyanah Anwar (Eds.)-
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Authors: Saif Shahin
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-02-01T05:39:31Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221074928
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- Book Review: American Propaganda from the Spanish-American War to Iraq:
War Stories, by Stephen R. Brydon-
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Authors: Ahmed Alrawi
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-29T05:22:29Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211073954
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- Book Review: Debating the Drug War: Race, Politics, and the Media
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Authors: Dana Mastro
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-28T06:47:29Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221074930
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- The Lessons Will Be Televised: Examining Television Portrayals of Sexual
Consequences by Gender-
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Authors: Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, Brandon Miller, Bradley J. Bond, Lindsay Roberts
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
This study examined the sexual double standard in the portrayal of sexual consequences on television. A content analysis of television programs nominated for Teen Choice Awards from 2012 to 2015 revealed that female characters received more negative sexual consequences than male characters, but there was no gender difference in who received positive sexual consequences. The gendered distribution of negative sexual consequences was qualified by age of the casts in the television programs. Negative sexual consequences were significantly more likely to be experienced by female characters than male characters within shows that primarily featured teens, thus reinforcing a discourse of sexual risk and danger for teen girls.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-28T06:43:50Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211073953
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- The Search Between Two Worlds: Motivations for and Consequences of
U.S.-Dwelling Chinese’s Use of U.S. and Chinese Media for COVID-19
Information-
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Authors: Hang Lu, Haoran Chu
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to inflict damage throughout the world, some minority groups are bearing a disproportionate share of its impacts. We concentrated on one such group, U.S.-dwelling Chinese, who have had to cope with challenges related to acculturation, health, safety, and racism. Recognizing that health information seeking was an essential step in helping maintain and improve health behaviors, we conducted a two-wave longitudinal study (N = 1,284) to examine the various factors predicting U.S.-dwelling Chinese’s use of U.S. and Chinese media for COVID-19 information as well as the consequences of their information seeking. Overall, we found that acculturation, accuracy (i.e., information insufficiency) and defense (i.e., conspiratorial beliefs) motivations, trust in media, and perceived information gathering capacity played a key role in explaining information seeking from an intercultural viewpoint, and that the use of U.S. and Chinese media was associated with different health behaviors. These findings contribute to theory and practice in a variety of ways.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-28T06:41:13Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211073951
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- Book Review: Corpus-Based Analysis of Ideological Bias: Migration in the
British Press, by Anna Islentyeva-
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Authors: Tingting Hu, Shuyong Li
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-27T06:25:14Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211072509
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- Building the Science News Agenda: The Permeability of Science Journalism
to Public Relations-
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Authors: Suzannah Evans Comfort, Mike Gruszczynski, Nicholas Browning
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
The current study examines the influence of press releases about scientific studies in terms of their impact on news coverage. Using an innovative approach that allowed for analysis of a large corpus of text and calculation of similarity scores, we were able to trace the uptake of press release materials into news media articles. In some cases, up to 65% of sentences in science news articles reflected high similarity to press release material—a potent indication of how powerful information subsidies can be. While our results contain some good news for public relations practitioners, they also carry a warning for consumers of journalism and for the public science agenda, which may be left vulnerable to bad actors undermining the trust that the public, and journalists, have in science. News organizations that had a history of producing award-winning science journalism were much less likely to draw on press release materials, indicating the importance of topic area expertise in producing independent science journalism.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-25T04:20:32Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211047949
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- Book Review: News Media Innovation Reconsidered: Ethics and Values in a
Creative Reconstruction of Journalism by Maria Luengo and Susana Herrera
(Eds.)-
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Authors: Bahtiyar Kurambayev
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-10T10:37:17Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211070832
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- Book Review: Religion in the Age of Digitalization: From New Media to
Spiritual Machines, by Giulia Isetti, Elisa Innerhofer, Harald Pechlaner,
and Michael de Rachewiltz (Eds.)-
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Authors: John P. Ferré
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-10T08:26:26Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211070585
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- News Sources and Framing of Responsibility on Devolution in Kenya,
2013–2017-
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Authors: Jimmy Ochieng
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
The present research examines two aspects of newspaper coverage of devolution during a 4-year period between March 27, 2013, and May 28, 2017: first, through the lens of attribution of responsibility, who the news media most blamed for problems facing devolution; second, whether reliance on official sources in reporting of devolution mirrors the indexing hypothesis. Findings show that the most-blamed actor and dominant news source on devolution is the county executive. Journalists continue to rely on the elite as their main news source and as a result they shape the discourse on devolution.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-10T06:54:15Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211066510
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- Integrating Power and Gradual Institutional Change in Public Relations
History: The Case of the People’s University in North Carolina After the
Civil War-
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Authors: Tae Ho Lee
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Drawing on the theory of gradual institutional change, this study analyzed the post-Civil War college reform efforts in North Carolina, integrating power with public relations history. Reformers worked under harsh institutional circumstances where resident elites held high veto power, while reformers had a low level of discretion for interpreting college education. Notwithstanding, reformers adopted layering tactics, introducing new rules of education for all alongside existing ones of education as legacy, for gradual institutional change. Specifically, reformers maintained a calm and objective tone, focusing on the universal value of education, both publicly and through anonymous publications in hostile press venues.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-10T06:13:22Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211066511
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- Book Review: Ethnic Journalism in the Global South, by Anna Gladkova and
Sadia Jamil (Eds.)-
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Authors: Twange Kasoma
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-04T06:36:46Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211068858
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- Book Review: News for The Rich, White, and Blue: How Place and Power
Distort American Journalism, by Nikki Usher-
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Authors: Robin Blom
First page: 589
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-17T09:18:45Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211065070
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- Book Review: You Don’t Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of
War, by Elizabeth Becker-
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Authors: Christopher Hanson
First page: 594
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-06T01:03:07Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221079221
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- Book Review: Beyond Journalistic Norms: Role Performance and News in
Comparative Perspective, by Claudia Mellado (Ed.)-
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Authors: Olivier Standaert
First page: 608
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-01-17T10:12:51Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990211070577
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- Newly Released
-
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First page: 612
Abstract: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
PubDate: 2022-04-28T06:42:05Z
DOI: 10.1177/10776990221088277
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