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9780275925345
'œRachlin is concerned with examining bias in the mass media that is more deeply imbedded than the biases and limitations of individual journalists or the organizations for which they work. Journalists are theorized as operating within an anti-socialist, anti-Soviet, pro-business hegemonic ideology only dimly perceived, if perceived at all. The study examines how Time, Newsweek, and The New York Times covered the Polish Solidarity movement and the shooting down of a Korean airliner by a Russian pilot. Rachlin makes a strong case that these media exhibited less than a thoroughly questioning attitude in reporting these events. Less convincing is the contention that they were operating in anti-socialist, pro-business blindness. Even less convincing is an attempt to demonstrate this blindness by comparing sympathetic coverage of Solidarity's defiance of Polish law with unsympathetic coverage of a threatened US postal strike and by comparing coverage of the Korean airliner with the shooting down of a Sudanese plane. The US media undoubtedly report within a cultural bias of which many practitioners are dimly aware, but any cultural hegemony that may shape their reporting is likely to be more complex than the anti-socialist, pro-business theory advanced here and not likely to be revealed fully through examination of how three media covered two news events. For advanced students.'' ChoiceRachlin, Allan is the author of 'News As Hegemonic Reality American Political Culture and the Framing of News Accounts' with ISBN 9780275925345 and ISBN 027592534X.
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