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News stories provide an essential confirmation of our ideas about
who we are, what we have to fear, and what to do about it: a
marketplace of ideas, shopped by rational citizen decision makers
but also a shared resource for grounding our contested narratives
of identity in objective reality. News as a fundamental social
process comes into being not when an event takes place or when a
report of the event is created but when that report becomes news to
someone. As it moves off the page into the community, news
discovers - through its interpretations - its reality in the lives
of the consumers. This book explores the path of news as it moves
through the tangled labyrinth of social identities and asserted
interests that lie beyond the page or screen. The language and
communication-oriented study of news promises a salient area of
investigation, pointing the way to an expansion, if not a
redefinition of basic anthropological ideas and practices of
ethnography, participant observation, and "the field" in the future
of anthropological research.
News stories provide an essential confirmation of our ideas about
who we are, what we have to fear, and what to do about it: a
marketplace of ideas, shopped by rational citizen decision makers
but also a shared resource for grounding our contested narratives
of identity in objective reality. News as a fundamental social
process comes into being not when an event takes place or when a
report of the event is created but when that report becomes news to
someone. As it moves off the page into the community, news
discovers - through its interpretations - its reality in the lives
of the consumers. This book explores the path of news as it moves
through the tangled labyrinth of social identities and asserted
interests that lie beyond the page or screen. The language and
communication-oriented study of news promises a salient area of
investigation, pointing the way to an expansion, if not a
redefinition of basic anthropological ideas and practices of
ethnography, participant observation, and "the field" in the future
of anthropological research.
Ironically, as telecommunications technology-the embodiment of
modernity-advances, bringing people in different nations into more
direct contact during conflict situations, traditional cultural
factors become increasingly important as differing ways of thinking
and acting collide. The mass media can be seen as a factor in the
creation of international conflict; they also, claim many scholars,
are the key to control and resolution of those problems. Whichever
side of the coin one chooses to look at-mass communication as cause
or cure of conflict-there is no doubt that the news media are no
longer peripheral players on the global scene; they are important
participants whose organizational patterns of behavior, values, and
motivations must be taken into account in understanding national
and international conflict. In this volume, a distinguished group
of authors explores the variety of ways the news media-newspapers,
radio, and television-are involved in conflict situations.
Conflicts between the United States and Iran, India and Pakistan,
and the United States and China are examined, and national-level
studies in Sri Lanka, Iran, Hong Kong, and the United States
provide varied contexts in which the authors look at the complex
interrelationships among government, news media, and the public in
conflict situations.
Ironically, as telecommunications technology-the embodiment of
modernity-advances, bringing people in different nations into more
direct contact during conflict situations, traditional cultural
factors become increasingly important as differing ways of thinking
and acting collide. The mass media can be seen as a factor in the
creation of international conflict; they also, claim many scholars,
are the key to control and resolution of those problems. Whichever
side of the coin one chooses to look at-mass communication as cause
or cure of conflict-there is no doubt that the news media are no
longer peripheral players on the global scene; they are important
participants whose organizational patterns of behavior, values, and
motivations must be taken into account in understanding national
and international conflict. In this volume, a distinguished group
of authors explores the variety of ways the news media-newspapers,
radio, and television-are involved in conflict situations.
Conflicts between the United States and Iran, India and Pakistan,
and the United States and China are examined, and national-level
studies in Sri Lanka, Iran, Hong Kong, and the United States
provide varied contexts in which the authors look at the complex
interrelationships among government, news media, and the public in
conflict situations.
This volume offers a theoretical exploration of the concept of
the communication system as a tool of social inquiry. Focusing on
the discourse of conflict management, Arno explores the linkage
between everyday communication about conflict, through talk and
other forms of message exchange among individuals and groups, and
large-scale societal conflicts and the institutions that shape
change by maintaining dominant forms of communicative causation
(cause and effect in social situations). This volume also develops
a theory of the relationship between conflict and communication
that demands ethnography as a theoretical necessity.
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