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The Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects Between President and The News Media: A Longitudinal Analysis of Attributes of North Korea |
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Abstract:
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This study investigated the relationship between President George W. Bush and The New York Times by focusing on North Korea over time. How the two counterparts portrayed attributes of North Korea and how the attributes influenced the public’s perceptions about the country were examined. The newspaper strongly influenced the attributes used by President Bush, although the latter also exerted some influence on the former. Attributes highlighted by the two counterparts influenced the public’s perceptions of North Korea. |
Most Common Document Word Stems:
attribut (149), north (119), korea (115), agenda (110), presid (107), media (95), bush (84), time (75), influenc (74), new (60), public (58), 2 (53), york (52), analysi (49), set (45), studi (44), issu (44), foreign (40), u.s (38), dialogu (34), news (34), |
Author's Keywords:
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Second-level agenda setting, Cognitive attribute, Affective attribute, North Korea, President Bush, and The New York Times |
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Association:
Name: International Communication Association URL: http://www.icahdq.org
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Seo, Hyun-jin. and Lim, Jeongsub. "The Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects Between President and The News Media: A Longitudinal Analysis of Attributes of North Korea" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA, May 23, 2007 <Not Available>. 2009-05-24 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p170750_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Seo, H. and Lim, J. , 2007-05-23 "The Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects Between President and The News Media: A Longitudinal Analysis of Attributes of North Korea" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-24 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p170750_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: This study investigated the relationship between President George W. Bush and The New York Times by focusing on North Korea over time. How the two counterparts portrayed attributes of North Korea and how the attributes influenced the public’s perceptions about the country were examined. The newspaper strongly influenced the attributes used by President Bush, although the latter also exerted some influence on the former. Attributes highlighted by the two counterparts influenced the public’s perceptions of North Korea. |
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| Document Type: |
application/pdf |
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28 |
| Word count: |
7196 |
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| The Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects between President and News Media: A Longitudinal Analysis of Attributes of North Korea By Hyunjin Seo (Graduate student) School of Journalism University of Missouri-Columbia 120 Neff Hall Columbia MO 65211-1200 hjs6vf@mizzou.edu hseo03@syr.edu 573.673.3982 Jeongsub Lim (Ph. D. Candidate) School of Journalism University of Missouri-Columbia 120 Neff Hall Columbia MO 65211-1200 jlqh@mizzou.edu Paper Presented at the Political Communication Division of the International Communication Association annual convention in San Francisco California May 24-28 2007 Key words: Second-level |
| on the news. Journalism Monographs 100. Wanta W. & Foote J. (1994). The president-news media relationship: A time series analysis of agenda-setting. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 38 437-448. Wanta W. Golan G. & Lee C. (2004). Agenda setting and international news: media influence on public perceptions of foreign nations. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 81 364-377. Wanta W. Stephenson M. A. Turk J. V. & McCombs M. E. (1989). How President's State of Union talk influenced news |
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