J&MC Quarterly Index – Content Analysis

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.

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