Dictionary of Media and Communication Studies, 8th edition

(Ann) #1
xxi

Topic guide

Cultivation; Cultural apparatus; Culture: copyrighting culture; Culture: globalization of; Culture
of deference; Culture: popular culture; Defamation; Democracy and the media; Demonization;
Deregulation, fi ve myths of; Deviance; Discourse analysis; Disempowerment; Emancipatory use
of the media; Emotive language; Empowerment; Ethnocentrism; Feminism; Fiction values; Free-
dom of Information Act (UK), 2005; Globalization (and the media); Global scrutiny; Hegemony;
Glocalization; HUAC: House Un-American Activities Committee; Human Rights Act (UK), 2000;
Ideological presumption; Ideological state apparatuses; Ideology; Impartiality; Information gaps;
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ); Issues; Jingoism; Journalism: phone-hacking; Kuuki;
Labelling process (and the media); Legitimation/delegitimation; Mainstreaming; McCombs and
Shaw’s agenda-setting model of media eff ects, 1976; McQuail’s accountability of media model, 1997;
Media activism; Media imperialism; Mediapolis; Moral entrepreneurs; Moral panics and the media;
News: the ‘maleness’ of news; News values; New World Information Order; Normative theories of
the mass media; Objectivity; Open source; Other; People’s Communication Charter; Pornography;
Post-Colonial theory; Preferred reading; Prejudice; Privacy; Propaganda; Public Aff airs; Public
opinion; Public service broadcasting (PSB); Public sphere; Racism; Reithian; Representation; Rogers
and Dearing’s agenda-setting model, 1987; Sexism; Status quo; Surveillance society; Teledemocracy;
Underground press; Values; Violence and the media; Visions of order; Watchdogs; Watergate;
Wedom, Th eydom; Whistleblowing.


NETWORK SOCIETY


Amazon.com; Apple Macintosh; Blogging; Blogosphere; Computer; Computing: cloud comput-
ing; Convergence; Cybernetics; Data footprint; Digital Economy Act (UK), 2010; Digital optimism;
Downloading; e-book; Facebook; Digital natives, digital immigrants; Google; Green Dam; Hacker,
hacktivist; Hyperreality; Information surplus; Internet; Internet: monitoring of content; Internet:
wireless Internet; Journalism: citizen journalism; Mass communication/mass self-communication;
Microsoft Windows; Mobilization; MySpace; Networking: social networking; Network neutrality;
N-Gen; New media; Online campaigning; Open source; Paywall; Plasticity: neuroplasticity and the
Internet; Podcast; Podcasting; Power law phenomenon; Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
(RIPA) (UK), 2000; Signature fi les; Smart mobs; Streaming; Technology: the consumerization of
technology; Teledemocracy; Text: integrity of the text; Television: Catch-up TV; Tor; Transcultura-
tion; Twitter; USA – Patriot Act, 2001; Virtual reality; Web or online drama; Web: World Wide Web
(www); Web 2.0; Wiki, Wikipedia; WikiLeaks; Yahoo!; Yaros’ ‘PICK’ model for multimedia news,
2009; YouTube.


NEWS MEDIA


Agenda-setting; Agenda-setting research; Alleyne’s news revolution model, 1997; al-Jazeera;
Anchorage; Bass’s ‘double action’ model of international news fl ow, 1969; Churnalism; ‘Coups and
earthquakes’ syndrome; Critical news analysis; Embedded reporters; Event; Fiction values; Framing:
media; Frequency; Gagging order; Galtung and Ruge’s model of selective gatekeeping, 1965; Horse-
race story; Immediacy; Impartiality; Indymedia; Intensity; J-curve; Journalism; Journalism: celebrity
journalism; Journalism: citizen journalism; Journalism: data journalism; Journalism: investigative
journalism; Journalism: phone-hacking; Journalism: ‘postmodern journalism’; Knowns, unknowns;
Kuuki; McLeod and Chaff ee’s ‘kite’ model, 1973; McNelly’s model of news fl ow, 1959; News; News
agencies; News: audience evaluation, six dimensions of; News elements: breaking, explanatory,
deep background; News Corp; News: globalization of; News management in times of war; News:
public relations news (PR); News: the ‘maleness’ of news; News values; News waves; One-step,
two-step, multi-step fl ow models of communication; Paywall; Personalization; Photojournalism;
Pool system; Representation; Rogers and Dearing’s agenda-setting model, 1987; Signifi cant spiral;
Spot news; Television news: inherent limitations; Visions of order; War: four stages of war report-
ing; Westerstähl and Johansson’s model of news factors in foreign news, 1994; White’s gatekeeper
model, 1950; WikiLeaks; Yaros’ ‘PICK’ model for multimedia news, 2009; YouTube.

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