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Western Journal of… | 8 |
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Brookey, Robert Alan – Western Journal of Communication, 1996
Argues that applications of "queer theory" must extend beyond questions of sexual representation. Contends that rhetorical theory can contribute to the investigation of sexuality, offering as an example an analysis of mainstream media representations of the homosexual "community." Concludes that the presentation of this…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Homosexuality, Mass Media Role, Moral Issues

Goldzwig, Steven R.; Sullivan, Patricia A. – Western Journal of Communication, 1995
Analyzes postassassination newspaper editorials eulogizing John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy. Argues that they fulfill four rhetorical functions: providing a public space for symbolic catharsis, celebrating individual virtues and mythic constructions of those virtues, attempting to reknit communal bonds, and calling…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Content Analysis, Editorials, Higher Education

Sanchez, Victoria E.; Stuckey, Mary E. – Western Journal of Communication, 2000
Contributes to scholarship advancing the understanding of communication regarding texts containing both hegemonic and emancipatory messages. Finds elements in "The Indian in the Cupboard" that promote emancipatory readings: maturation, overt challenges to hegemonic codes, and proffering of implicit alternatives to those codes. Discusses…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Films, Higher Education

Pfau, Michael; Eveland, William P., Jr. – Western Journal of Communication, 1996
Argues that the 1992 presidential election campaign was the first to employ nontraditional news media such as talk shows as a prevalent form of campaign communication for the candidates. Outlines the format of the study. Documents the impact of nontraditional news media on the campaign efforts for each candidate. (PA)
Descriptors: Mass Media Role, Media Research, News Media, Political Attitudes

Baym, Geoffrey – Western Journal of Communication, 2000
Contributes to scholarship advancing the understanding of human communication. Examines how journalists construct their authority to tell moralizing stories. Shows how journalists construct a discursive strategy asserting their right to serve as moral agents on two levels: as "institutional we," determining the "facts," and as…
Descriptors: Broadcast Journalism, Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education

Sloop, John M. – Western Journal of Communication, 2000
Contributes to scholarship advancing the understanding of human communication by examining discourse in the local and national press regarding the Brandon Teena case that reflects public discussions of sex, gender, sexuality, and transgenderism. Investigates public understandings of the "true" meaning of sex. Examines the struggle over…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Mass Media Role, Rhetoric

Cantor, Joanne; Omdahl, Becky L. – Western Journal of Communication, 1999
Presents a study where grade-school children were exposed to a scene from a movie involving one of two activities (either fire- or water-related activities) and involving one of two outcomes (fatal accidents or neutral events). Finds that watching the dramatized accidents increased students' estimated importance of adopting safety guidelines and…
Descriptors: Accident Prevention, Accidents, Elementary Education, Fire Protection

Aden, Richard C. – Western Journal of Communication, 1995
Illustrates how nostalgic communication invites individuals disenchanted with their lives to make a temporal escape to a secure place of opposition. Analyzes the HBO documentary "When It Was a Game" and identifies how the text invites contemporary United States workers facing loss of workforce identity to effect a temporary escape to a…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Research, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis