AEJMC Network

Networking Home for Divisions and Interest Groups

Shared web space for AEJMC DIGs

  • Home
  • Membership
    • Members Sites
    • FAQs
    • Contact Us
  • WordPress
    • An overview
    • Terms of use
    • User privilege levels
      • Administrator policy
      • Administrator agreement
    • WordPress security
    • Lost password
    • WordPress themes
      • Maintaining appearances
    • WordPress plugins
    • Posting video
    • WordPress news & facts

J&MC Quarterly Index – Content Analysis

March 27, 2012 by Kyshia

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Content Analysis

ABC’s “Person of the Week”: American Values in Television News (Stephanie Greco Larson and Martha Bailey) 75:3, 487-499.

Alternative Things Considered: A Comparison of National Public Radio and Pacifica Radio News Coverage (Alan G. Stavitsky and Timothy W. Gleason) 71:4, 775-786.

A Battle for Humor: Satire and Censorship in Le Bavard (Ross F. Collins) 73:3, 645-656.

A Benchmark Study of Elaboration and Sourcing in Science Stories for Eight American Newspapers (Shirley Ramsey) 76:1, 87-98.

The Birth of a Notion: Media Coverage of Contraception, 1915-1917 (Dolores Flamiano) 75:3, 560-571.

The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.

A Case Study of Deliberative Democracy on Television: Civic Dialogue on C-SPAN Call-in Shows (David D. Kurpius and Andrew Mendelson) 79:3, 587-601.

Changes in News Use on the Front Pages of the American Newspaper, 1986-1993 (Janet A. Bridges and Lamar W. Bridges) 74:4, 826-838.

Civic Duties: Newspaper Journalists’ Views on Public Journalism (Paul S. Voakes) 76:4, 756-774.

The Color of Crime and the Court: A Content Analysis of Minority Representation on Television (Ron Tamborini, Dana E. Mastro, Rebecca M. Chory-Assad, and Ren He Huang) 77:3, 639-653.

A Content Analysis of Content Analyses: Twenty-Five Years of Journalism Quarterly (Daniel Riffe and Alan Freitag) 74:4, 873-882.

Content Differences between Daily Newspapers with Strong and Weak Market Orientations (Randal A. Beam) 80:2, 368-390.

Contrast in U.S. Media Coverage of Two Major Canadian Elections (L. Paul Husselbee and Guido H. Stempel III) 74:3, 591-601.

Corporate Newspaper Structure, Editorial Page Vigor, and Social Change (David Demers) 73:4, 857-877.

Covering Domestic Violence: How the O.J. Simpson Case Shaped Reporting of Domestic Violence in the News Media (Kimberly A. Maxwell, John Huxford, Catherine Borum, and Robert Hornik) 77:2, 258-272.

Cultural Standards of Attractiveness: A Thirty-Year Look at Changes in Male Images in Magazines (Cheryl Law and Magdala Peixoto Labre) 79:3, 697-711.

“A Death in the American Family”: Myth, Memory, and National Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr. (Carolyn Kitch) 79:2, 294-309.

Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults (Tom Reichert, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz) 80:3, 513-527.

Diversity in the News: A Conceptual and Methodological Framework (Paul S. Voakes, Jack Kapfer, David Kurpius, and David Shano-Yeon Chern) 73:3, 582-593.

Divining the Social Order: Class, Gender, and Magazine Astrology Columns (William Evans) 73:2, 389-400.

Fairness and Balance of Selected Newspaper Coverage of Controversial National, State, and Local Issues (Frederick Fico and Stan Soffin) 72:3, 621-633.

The Economy and Second-Level Agenda Setting: A Time-Series Analysis of Economic News and Public Opinion about the Economy (Joe Bob Hester and Rhonda Gibson) 80:1, 73-90.

Embargoes and Science News (Vincent Kiernan) 80:4, 903-920.

Experts in the Mass Media: Researchers as Sources in Danish Daily Newspapers, 1961-2001 (Erik Albæk, Peter Munk Christiansen, and Lise Togeby) 80:4, 937-948.

Fairness and Balance in the Structural Characteristics of Newspaper Stories on the 1996 Presidential Election (Frederick Fico and William Cote) 76:1, 124-137.

Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.

Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.

The Global Village in Atlanta: A Textual Analysis of Olympic News Coverage for Children in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Elli P. Lester-Roushanzamir and Usha Raman) 76:4, 699-712.

Going Negative: Candidate Usage of Internet Web Sites during the 2000 Presidential Campaign (Robert H. Wicks and Boubacar Souley) 80:1, 128-144.

Good News from a Bad Neighborhood: Toward an Alternative to the Discourse of Urban Pathology (James S. Ettema and Limor Peer) 73:4, 835-856.

How Editors and Readers Rank and Rate the Importance of Eighteen Traditional Standards of Newspaper Excellence (George Albert Gladney) 73:2, 319-331.

How Magazines Covered Media Companies’ Mergers: The Case of the Evolution of Time Inc. (Jaemin Jung) 79:3, 681-696.

How Newspapers Framed Breast Implants in the 1990s (Angela Powers and Julie L. Andsager) 76:3, 551-64.

The Ideology of Success in Major American Farm Magazines, 1934-1991 (Gerry Walter) 73:3, 594-608.

The Influence of Layout on the Perceived Tone of News Articles (Susan E. Middlestadt and Kevin G. Barnhurst) 76:2, 264-276.

Interactive Disaster Communication on the Internet: A Content Analysis of Sixty-Four Disaster Relief Home Pages (Mary Jae Paul) 78:4, 739-753.

International Conflict Coverage in Japanese Local Daily Newspapers (Hiromi Cho and Stephen Lacy) 77:4, 830-845.

Journalistic Authority: Textual Strategies of Legitimation (Lisbeth Lipari) 73:4, 821-834.

Local Press Coverage of Environmental Conflict (Claire E. Taylor, Jung-Sook Lee, and William R. Davie) 77:1, 175-192.

Looking beyond Hate: How National and Regional Newspapers Framed Hate Crimes in Jasper, Texas, and Laramie Wyoming (L. Paul Husselbee and Larry Elliott) 79:4, 833-852.

The Louisville Courier-Journal’s News Content after Purchase by Gannett (David C. Coulson and Anne Hansen) 72:1, 205-215.

“Lynch-Mob Journalism” vs. “Compelling Human Drama”: Editorial Responses to Coverage of the Pretrial Phase of the O.J. Simpson Case (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 76:3, 499-515.

Mass Communication Research Trends from 1980 to 1999 (Rasha Kamhawi and David Weaver) 80:1, 7-27.

Media Coverage of AIDS, Cancer, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Test of the Public Arenas Model (James K. Hertog, John R. Finnegan, Jr., and Emily Kahn) 71:2, 291-304.

Medicine, Media, and Celebrities: News Coverage of Breast Cancer, 1960-1995 (Julia B. Corbett and Motomi Mori) 76:2, 229-249.

The Microscope and the Moving Target: The Challenge of Applying Content Analysis to the World Wide Web (Sally J. McMillan) 77:1, 80-98.

Myth in Charles Kuralt’s “On the Road” (Matthew C. Ehrlich) 79:2, 327-338.

Myth and Terror on the Editorial Page: The New York Times Responds to September 11, 2001 (Jack Lule) 79:2, 275-293.

Nation, Capitalism, Myth: Covering News of Economic Globalization (Elfriede Fürsich) 79:2, 353-373.

Network TV Sex as a Counterprogramming Strategy during a Sweeps Period: An Analysis of Content and Ratings (Jon A. Shidler and Dennis T. Lowry) 72:1, 147-157.

Newspaper Coverage of Fundamentalist Christians, 1980-2000 (Peter A. Kerr and Patricia Moy) 79:1, 54-72.

Newspaper Economic Coverage of Motor Vehicle Emissions Standards (David C. Coulson and Stephen Lacy) 75:1, 154-166.

The “Not-So-Genial” Conspiracy? The New York Times and Six Presidential “Honeymoons,” 1953-1993 (William J. Hughes) 72:4, 841-850.

Objective Evidence of Media Bias: Newspaper Coverage of Congressional Party Switchers (David Niven) 80:2, 311-326.

Old-Growth Forests on Network News: News Sources and the Framing of an Environmental Controversy (Carol M. Liebler and Jacob Bendix) 73:1, 53-65.

Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.

Perception of Interviewees with Less-Than-Perfect English: Implications for Newspaper Citations (Paul Isom, Edward Johnson, James McCollum, and Dolf Zillmann) 72:4, 874-882.

Picturing the Gulf War: Constructing an Image of War in Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report (Michael Griffin and Jongsoo Lee) 72:4, 813-825.

Political Reality and Editorial Cartoons in Japan: How the National Dailies Illustrate the Japanese Prime Minister (Ofer Feldman) 72:3, 571-580.

“Portraits of Grief,” Reflectors of Values: The New York Times Remembers Victims of September 11 (Janice Hume) 80:1, 166-182.

Predictors of Viewing and Enjoyment of Reality-Based and Fictional Crime Shows (Mary Beth Oliver and G. Blake Armstrong) 72:3, 559-570.

The Presentation of Self in Virtual Life: Characteristics of Personal Home Pages (Zizi Papacharissi) 79:3, 643-660.

The Princess and the Paparazzi: Blame, Responsibility, and the Media’s Role in the Death of Diana (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 80:3, 666-688.

The Promise and Peril of Anecdotes in News Coverage: An Ethical Analysis (David A. Craig) 80:4, 802-817.

Proximity and Power Factors in Western Coverage of the Sub-Saharan AIDS Crisis (Kristen Alley Swain) 80:1, 145-165.

Reliability in Cross-National Content Analysis (Jochen Peter and Edmund Lauf) 79:4, 815-832.

Representation and Reality in the Portrayal of Blacks on Network Television News (Robert M. Entman) 71:3, 509-520.

Revisiting the Clinton/Lewinsky Scandal: The Convergence of Agenda Setting and Framing (Julie Yioutas and Ivana Segvic) 80:3, 567-582.

Second-Level Agenda Setting in the New Hampshire Primary: A Comparison of Coverage in Three Newspapers and Public Perceptions of Candidates (Guy Golan and Wayne Wanta) 78:2, 247-259.

Sex and the Soaps: A Comparative Content Analysis of Health Issues (Beth Olson) 71:4, 840-850.

Sex and Violence in Slasher Films: Re-examining the Assumptions (Barry S. Sapolsky, Fred Molitor, and Sarah Luque) 80:1, 28-38.

Sex, Violence, and Consonance/Differentiation: An Analysis of Local TV News Values (William R. Davie and Jung-Sook Lee) 72:1, 128-138.

Skin Tones and Physical Features of Blacks in Magazine Advertisements (Kevin L. Keenan) 73:4, 905-912.

Social Construction of Three Influenza Pandemics in the New York Times (Debra E. Blakely) 80:4, 884-902.

Social or Economic Concerns: How News and Women‘s Magazines Framed Breast Cancer in the 1990s (Julie L. Andsager and Angela Powers) 76:3, 531-550.

The Sound Bites, the Biters, and the Bitten: An Analysis of Network TV News Bias in Campaign ’92 (Dennis T. Lowry and Jon A. Shidler) 72:1, 33-44.

Source Use in a “News Disaster” Account: A Content Analysis of Voter News Service Stories (Randall S. Sumpter and Melissa A. Braddock) 79:3, 539-558.

Structural Pluralism, Ethnic Pluralism, and Community Newspapers (Douglas Blanks Hindman, Robert Littlefield, Ann Preston, and Dennis Neumann) 76:2, 250-263.

Tabloid and Traditional Television News Magazine Crime Stories: Crime Lessons and Reaffirmation of Social Class Distinctions (Maria Elizabeth Grabe) 73:4, 926-946.

Television’s Portrayal of the Environment: 1991-1995 (James Shanahan and Katherine McComas) 74:1, 147-159.

“Their Rising Voices”: A Study of Civil Rights, Social Movements, and Advertising in the New York Times (Susan Dente Ross) 75:3, 518-534.

This Just In … How National TV News Handled the Breaking “Live” Coverage of September 11 (Amy Reynolds and Brooke Barnett) 80:3, 689-703.

Toward a “Philosophy of Framing”: News Narratives for Public Journalism (Peter Parisi) 74:4, 673-686.

Unlicensed Broadcasting: Content and Conformity (Steve Jones) 71:2, 395-402.

Vibrant, But Invisible: A Study of Contemporary Religious Periodicals (Ken Waters) 78:2, 307-320.

VNRs and Air Checks: A Content Analysis of the Use of Video News Releases in Television Newscasts (Glen T. Cameron and David Blount) 73:4, 890-904.

Web Page Design and Graphic Use of Three U.S. Newspapers (Xigen Li) 75:2, 353-365.

When the News Doesn’t Fit: The New York Times and Hitler’s First Two Months in Office, February/March 1933 (Gary Klein) 78:1, 127-149.

Women’s Pages or People’s Pages: The Production of News for Women in the Washington Post in the 1950s (Mei-Ling Yang) 73:2, 364-378.

The World Outside: Local TV News Treatment of Imported News (Raymond L. Carroll and C.A. Tuggle) 74:1, 123-133.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

Filed Under: Uncategorized

AEJMC Network

"AEJMC Network" is the name given to the server space shared by official bodies of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.

Search

RSS AEJMC Job Postings

Genesis Theme Support by WebPresence · Copyright © 2026 AEJMC · Log in