Browsing by Author "Ismail A."
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Configuring terrorism in the age of ISIS: The New York Times coverage of the 2015 Beirut and Paris attacks(SAGE Publications Ltd, 2019) Ismail A.; Mishra S.; October University for Modern Sciences and Arts (MSA); Egypt; Indian Institute of Management Calcutta; IndiaThis study inquires whether cultural proximity may explain how media handle terrorism in a global village era where cultural proximity may have given way to cosmopolitanism in news-making. Findings indicate that although loss of life is not culture-bound, cultural proximity persists, as comes through in the sheer contrast in the amount of coverage devoted to Paris versus Beirut. This distinction ought to be qualified, for even with Paris, the self-interest of the nation-state was prioritized, meaning that national security and welfare come first, followed by those of culturally proximate locales. Sensational violence was emphasized for both Lebanese and French victims. The Author(s) 2019.Item Social media, legacy media and gatekeeping: the protest paradigm in news of Ferguson and Charlottesville(Routledge, 2019) Ismail A.; Torosyan G.; Tully M.; Department of Journalism; Faculty of Mass Communication; October University for Modern Sciences and Arts (MSA); Cairo; Egypt; Department of Communication and Media; IRC B-21A; State University of New York; Oneonta; NY; United States; School of Journalism and Mass Communication; E332 Adler Journalism Building; University of Iowa; Iowa City; IA; United StatesThis study investigates the site of intersection between legacy and social media, whereby it asks how local legacy media (St Louis Post-Dispatch and Richmond Times-Dispatch) invoked social media (Facebook and Twitter) discourse within their coverage of the Ferguson (2014) and Charlottesville (2017) events. It thus explores how gatekeeping is manifested and, consequently, how the protest paradigm emerged in a news landscape of proliferating social media. Thematic textual analysis indicates that coverage of Charlottesville and Ferguson clearly relied on indulging the social media sphere in important ways. Common themes of social media as multipurpose platforms, as interfacing with law and order, and as reconciling material and digital modes culminating in social activism were revealed. The study shows that the protest paradigm that has long characterized legacy medias coverage of social protest is not as pure as it may once have been, since a social media component is helping define the contours and content of legacy medias landscape. 2019, 2019 Taylor & Francis.