可借阅:*
图书馆 | 资料类型 | 排架号 | 子计数 | 书架位置 | 状态 | 图书预约 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
正在检索... Science | Book | 302.23 AL79C, 2002 | 1 | Stacks | 正在检索... 未知 | 正在检索... 不可借阅 |
链接这些题名
已订购
摘要
摘要
Taking advantage of electronic information bases, Altheide, whose previous interpretive studies of the mass media are well known, uses a "tracking discourse" method to show how the nature and use of the word "fear" by mass media have changed over the years. His analysis examines how some of the topics associated with fear (e.g., AIDS, crime, immigrants, race, sexuality, schools, children) have shifted in emphasis, and how certain news organizations and social institutions benefit from the exploitation of fear.
This book is about fear and its expanding place in our public life. The author documents the rise of a "discourse of fear" in the present era: the pervasive communication, sym#65533;bolic awareness, and expectation that danger and risk surround us. Altheide offers explanations of how this occurred and suggests some of its serious social consequences. In doing so, he focuses on the nature and use of social power and social control. The mass media play a significant role in shaping social definitions that govern social action. Relatedly, his methodological and theoretical foundation in classical social theory, existential-phenomenology, ethnomethodology, and symbolic interactionism leads him to view social power as the capacity to define situations for self and others.
Creating Fear is focused on sorting out the ways that the mass media and popular culture help define social situa#65533;tions. It helps understand the nature, process, and organiza#65533;tion of mass media operations, including news procedures, perspectives, and formats. It recognizes the need to expand our methodological frameworks to incorporate new infor#65533;mation technologies and databases and to ask different ques#65533;tions. This volume, which attempts to break the circle of fear discourse, will be of interest to sociologists, communi#65533;cations scholars, and criminologists.
评论 (1)
Choice 评论
A prolific media scholar, Altheide (Arizona State Univ.) combines sociology with media studies to address why and how (and the degree to which) news media are making people more fearful of their surroundings and life in general. Altheide opens with a chapter discussing the concept of fear in its various contexts (with some enlightening examples). He then reviews his own research framework (he has been at this book for a decade) and the production of fear, the discourse (words, pictures) of fear, journalistic interviewing, policing crime and fear in news media (e.g., why heavy watchers of television think there is more crime than actually exists), children and the discourse of fear, and the lens (through the media) of fear. Altheide bases much of this on careful content analysis of stories and headlines in key national newspapers. Although he wrote most of the book before the 9-11 terrorist attacks, he surely provides meaningful information (and some guidance) for the present. As the author sums it up, "The major point of this book is that fear has become more pervasive in our lives." Using some fascinating charts and diagrams to supplement his discussion, Altheide makes clear how and why this is true. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals. C. Sterling George Washington University