
- 262 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
News media notionally underpins a vibrant and diverse democracy by representing political, industrial and social conflict to mass audiences. Yet, few studies measure how equitably journalists frame public contestation. Despite framing theory's extensive use in media and communication scholarship, little is known about how frames are created and disseminated - how frames are built - to explain how and why journalists frame news the way they do.
Media Inequality proposes that frame building occurs through a two-step process of frame adoption and replication. This two-step frame-building process is explored by identifying the newspaper master narratives used in five historical industrial dispute case studies. These master narratives are then mapped to public narratives used by unionised firefighters and their employer in the Australian case of the 2016 Victorian Country Fire Authority industrial dispute. By theorising about the causes of journalists' inequitable framing of contested narratives, Media Inequality tells the story of unconscious structural media bias, interrogates the power of news media to reinforce dominant frames, offers valuable theoretical perspectives about the influence of media power on the accumulation of power in society, and provides lessons for groups communicating in competitive contexts.
Media Inequality is thus valuable to scholars, academics and research students in the fields of journalism, communication, and media, particularly scholars interested in how journalists represent political, industrial, and social contestation.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction: Industrial relations and the media marketplace of ideas
- 2 Introducing narrative frame building
- 3 Historical industrial disputes: Master narratives of empathy and authority
- 4 An authority story: The 2016 Country Fire Authority dispute
- 5 Step one of media inequality in frame building: Frame adoption
- 6 Step two of media inequality in frame building: Frame replication
- 7 Media inequality: Frame building bias and media power
- References
- Index