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Publication | Open Access

Dimensions of Political News Cultures: Sound Bite and Image Bite News in France, Germany, Great Britain, and the United States

254

Citations

22

References

2008

Year

TLDR

The study systematically analyzes sound and image bites across countries and time, introduces a cross‑national theoretical model linking sound‑bite news to media culture, and tests seven hypotheses at organizational, national, and transnational levels. The authors extend sound‑bite research to include visuals, analyzing both sound and image bites for length, content, and editorial packaging, and apply a cross‑national theoretical model linking sound‑bite news to media culture. The analysis reveals three distinct political news cultures—strongly interventionist U.S., moderately interventionist Anglo‑German, and noninterventionist French—while multivariate data show national parameters still exert enduring influence despite transnational convergence, leading to conclusions for comparative political communication research.

Abstract

This study offers the first systematic analysis of sound bites and image bites across countries and across time. It goes beyond traditional sound bite research by extending the scope of analysis also to visuals and by analyzing both sound and image bites not only with regard to their length but also with regard to their content and editorial packaging. Based on these findings, contours of three different political news cultures emerge: a strongly interventionist U.S. American approach, a moderately interventionist Anglo-German approach, and a noninterventionist French approach. Adopting an explicitly cross-national comparative perspective, the study introduces a theoretical model that explains sound bite news in divergent media systems and links it to the concept of media culture. It derives seven hypotheses from the model and tests them on three levels of analysis—organizational, national, and transnational. Despite a growing transnational convergence, multivariate data analysis shows evidence of the enduring importance that national parameters continue to exert. Conclusions for comparative political communication research are drawn.

References

YearCitations

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