Publication | Closed Access
How States, Markets and Globalization Shape the News
137
Citations
15
References
2007
Year
Citizen JournalismFrenchCivil Society ViewpointsPublic OpinionNews DistributionMedia IndustriesPopular CultureMedia StudiesJournalismMedia ActivismNews AnalyticsPolitical CommunicationDiscourse AnalysisPolitical Elite ViewpointsLanguage StudiesGlobalization ShapeNews SemanticsGeopoliticsMedia InstitutionsFrench CultureNews CoverageGlobal MediaGlobalizationComparative Content AnalysisNews ConsumptionInternational CoverageJournalism HistoryFrench MediaCritical Media StudiesMass CommunicationArtsPolitical Science
This article presents a comparative content analysis of the US and French national press in the 1960s and 1990s to test hypotheses about the influence of media structure on journalistic discourse. The US and French press are presented as strongly contrasting models, with the US press more commercialized, and the French press more closely tied to the political field. Using a variety of story- and paragraph-level content indicators, this studyshows that the French press ( Le Monde and Le Figaro) offers relatively more critical coverage, a greater representation of civil society viewpoints, a stronger emphasis on both the ideological and strategic ‘game’ aspects of politics, and a higher proportion of interpretation and opinion mixed with factual reporting. Representing the US national press, The New York Times is shown to ‘index’ its coverage more closely to political elite viewpoints. Despite globalizing pressures, French-US differences have not diminished over time.
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