The following is from Mr. Deepak Ranjan Jena. I trust these abstracts will be of great help to media researchers searching for the latest studies for literature review, or to locate concepts for new studies.
Abstracts: Media Watch May 2014
Abstracts: Media Watch May 2014
(Vol. 5, No. 2)
Impact Factor: SJIF 3.276 |
IIFS 0.993 | ISRA 0.834
Facebook Culture: Millennial Formation of Social Identity
Hilary K. U’Ren
Portland State University, USA
Social Networking Sites have become a
rising trend over the past decade as a source of interaction on the internet.
Facebook.com, in particular, has become dangerously popular, with over 700
million active users to date. This study examines how Millennial’s use Facebook
in order to regulate impression management and gain cultural capital through
their virtual networks. Erving Goffman developed the concept of impression
management as a method of censoring or altering the literal impression we are
projecting to those around us in order to emanate a certain identity. Facebook
aids this process by allowing us to actively edit exactly what we say about
ourselves on a platform that is connected to everyone we know. Profiles were
coded according to the nature of their About Me sections, profile photos, and
count of online friends. Through simple random sampling amongst these
categories of profiles, interviewees were selected. Each Millennial selected
agreed to participate and was interviewed for a period of time ranging between
thirty and sixty minutes. From this data, it was found that members of the
Millennial generation use the site to manipulate the way they are perceived by
various groups, like peers, coworkers, and parents, present on the site.
Offline
Goes Online: Does the Internet Implement or Supplement our Communication and
Relationships?
Kaja Tampere
& Ave Tampere
Tallinn University, Estonia
This paper will be looking at the
computer code-mediated communication and relationships between people.
Questions, for which answers will be sought in the paper are—Does the Internet
supplement or implement our communication and relationships? Supplement by
filling in pieces of relationships that we would otherwise be missing out on;
implement by creating or sustaining relationships that otherwise would not exist?
How are relationships that were formed offline sustained online? How does the
Internet change the concept of ‘long-distance’ in terms of communicating
relationships? To study the topic of this paper, a literary analysis will be
performed. The argument will be based on the example of Facebook. The study
will focus on examples and theories covering the Western world where the
research has been conducted and claims made.
Social Media and Documentary Cinema:
the Arab Spring, the Wall Street Movement, Challenges and Implications for
Documentary Filmmakers
Fritz
Kohle
Edinburgh University, UK
Edinburgh University, UK
Used by
millions on a daily basis Web 2 and social media have become part of our lives;
Facebook arguably developed into the largest online group worldwide with some
800 million users – or one seventh of the world’s population. (Facebook, 2011)
This paper reviews social media and provides a general overview of the same
from the perspective of an independent documentary filmmaker. The paper
investigates use of social media during the Arab Spring and Wall Street
Movement (Occupy, 2011) and compares social- with traditional media. Using the
example of the documentary ‘God, Church, Pills & Condoms’ (F Kohle, A
Cuevas, 2011) the tools social media offers are examined and their applications
are discussed. Web 2 is the accumulative sum of print, radio, TV and film,
offering an ever-increasing amount of content. What are the implications and
challenges for Documentary filmmakers? How can documentary filmmakers explore
the full potential of social media? Does social media really offer an
alternative to traditional content commissioning, content development and
distribution as well as fund raising? The paper concludes by examining future
trends for social media and potential applications in documentary filmmaking.
Media Morality in a Postmodern Era: A Model for Ethics
Restoration
in the Mass Media
Kingsley Okoro
Harbor
Jacksonville State University, USA
This paper develops a chronology of
milestones in mass media ethics from inception to contemporary times,
demonstrating that media ethics has been on the decline throughout mass media’s
history. As a response to the continual decline of ethics in the mass media,
this paper proposes a model for restoring ethics to the mass media. The model
has four corner stones: (i) journalism and mass communication curricular
revision, (ii) student entry placement, (iii) revised training for future
journalists, and (iv) journalistic de-collectivization, a term used by this
author to describe the act of shielding a journalist from the impact of
corporate culture in the newsroom. Essential theoretical frameworks guiding the
model include Kohlberg’s moral development theory and Patterson and Wilkins’s
ethical news values.
Bollywoodization of the War on Terror
Daya
Thussu
University of Westminster, London, UK
University of Westminster, London, UK
In the decade since
9/11, the ‘war on terror’ has been framed in mainstream global media discourses
predominantly as a conflict between medievalist Islamic terrorists and the
modern West, led by the United States. In India, where the media market has
grown exponentially along the lines of the US commercially led model, the media
discourse has broadly followed this global trajectory. After providing an
overview of terrorism in India, this article focuses on the coverage of the
terrorist attacks on Mumbai on 26 November 2008, the most extensively covered
terrorism story outside the Western world.
The article shows how during ‘India’s 9/11,’ media and communication technologies
intersected to create a tele-visual spectacle, in a fiercely competitive media
market, one increasingly shaped by an infotainment-driven news culture. Such
‘Bollywoodization’ of the ‘war on terror,’ the article suggests, contributes to
presenting grim realities of political conflicts as a feast of visually
arresting, emotionally-charged entertainment – genres skilfully borrowed from
India’s bourgeoning film industry, to sustain ratings.
Political
Economy of Corporate Power and Free Speech
in the
United States
Jeffrey Layne Blevins
University of
Cincinnati, USA
This political economic analysis of U.S.
Supreme Court jurisprudence broadly examines corporate speech rights in
campaigns and elections, in commercial speech, and in conflicts between speech
and privacy. From this examination, it
appears that corporate wealth has expressed its dominance within communication
space, which was once the primary domain of human liberty. Moreover, the analysis demonstrates the
‘historical amnesia’ expressed within the Supreme Court about the revolutionary
potential of electronic media, as corporate encroachment of communication space
is diminishing the value of human speech under the law.
Journalism Ethics: The Uneven Tempo between
International Principles and Local Practice
Kiranjit Kaur & Halimahton Shaari
Universiti Teknologi MARA,
Malaysia
Media codes of ethics
comprise principles of ethics and good practice. Though media codes may vary from country to
country, the global media and communication profession is guided by principles
that share many common values for the simple reason that many social and
individual values are universal. In the
journalism profession, as an example, ethical practice would almost always
revolve around universal values like accuracy, honesty, truth, objectivity and freedom.
Though the Malaysian media adopt and practise many international principles,
media practitioners have also to take cognizance of the socio-political
sensitivities and sensibilities that shape and influence the workings and
contents of the media. Qualitative interviews with media practitioners provide
insights into how values and principles, both local and international, either
go in tandem or clash and impact on media practices. This paper also studies
the practicality and applicability of media codes in the face of
rapidly-changing media values, contents and technology. The media occasionally violate ethical
boundaries; however these are sometimes not perceived as digressions by media
practitioners as media values and roles undergo a facelift.
Press Coverage of Post Tamil Eelam
War in Dinamani
C.
J. Ravi Krishnan, C. Pichandy & Francis Barclay
PSG College of Arts and Science, Coimbatore, India
PSG College of Arts and Science, Coimbatore, India
The war for
Tamil Eelam and the last battle at northern region of Sri Lanka between the
government and LTTE has been seriously viewed and reported by media around the
world. However ‘Eelam’ is an issue close to the heart of the Tamils in the
world. The present study has chosen the post-war period for two years from January 2009 to January 2011 to find out
how the Tamil print media in Tamil Nadu reacted to the end of the LTTE regime
in Sri Lankan northern province and the sentiments of the Tamil population.
Editorials and columns of Tamil daily, Dinamani
considered for the study. The study revealed that editorials and columns
published during that time exposed violations of human rights by Sri Lankan
government. The study also found the role played by the Indian and Tamil Nadu
government during and after the war period were not satisfactory in the context
of dealing the Sri Lankan Tamilian issues.
Media
Effects of Assam State Assembly Elections 2011
Kh. Kabi
Rajiv Gandhi University, India.
Anupa Lahkar
Assam Don Bosco University, India
Rajiv Gandhi University, India.
Anupa Lahkar
Assam Don Bosco University, India
Election is one
of the most significant exercises particularly in a democracy, wherein citizens
participate to elect their representative. For the first time in the history of
Assam (Northeast India) State Assembly Election, campaign was carried out in
the presence of wide media coverage. This study focuses on the impact of media’s
coverage of the election campaigns during the last Assam state assembly
election held in 2011. It examined the
role of media in setting the agenda of important election issues and its impact
on the opinion of the people. Attempts have been made to find out the effects
of political campaign on the potential voters in view of their political
opinion formation and their decision to participate and vote for a particular
party or candidate. The study revealed that majority of them has been impacted
by the media coverage to some extent and it has aroused them to participate and
vote. However when it came to their voting behavior, it is their personal
choice and reasons that matter and not necessarily due to media’s
campaign.
Cross-Media Ownership: Would It be Really Curbed?
Shivaji Sarkar
India has been debating the issue of
cross-media ownership for the last over 60 years. It is not that it is being
raised by Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) at the behest of the
ministry of information and broadcasting for the first time. In fact, TRAI in
its paper expresses limitation on checkmating cross-media ownership. Rather
softly it has given it up. TRAI chairman Rahul Khullar
said the regulator would, with the help of the Competition Commission of India,
attempt to ensure that there are a minimum number of mergers and acquisitions.
A consultation paper will spell out restrictions, make mandatory disclosure
requirements, spell out levels of market share which will ensure plurality and
diversity, list general disqualifications, recommend how cross media ownership
can be dealt with, set rules for disaggregated markets, and ensure minimum
mergers and acquisitions.
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