Prevailing Impressions of Social Actors in Korean News Coverage of a Public Health Crisis
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2004
Department
Mass Communication and Journalism
School
Communication
Abstract
A content analysis of coverage of a Korean public health crisis from September 1999 to December 2000 explored four hypotheses regarding how major social actors were depicted within two national newspapers, Chosun Ilbo, a conservative daily, and Hankyoreh, a more liberal, youth-oriented daily. The findings failed to support (my of the four hypotheses. The coverage of major actors tended to range from unfavorable in Hankyoreh to equivocal in Chosun Ilbo. The study, suggests that (1) the depiction of social actors was different between leading Korean news organizations and (2) a one-dimensional, broad characterization of the Korean news media's alleged biases over time was difficult to validate. The stud), also implies that a tendency to uniformly characterize the depiction of social actors by all national news organizations is difficult in Korea and, perhaps, in similar cultural contexts.
Publication Title
Science Communication
Volume
25
Issue
4
First Page
399
Last Page
416
Recommended Citation
Logan, R. A.,
Shin, J.,
Park, J.
(2004). Prevailing Impressions of Social Actors in Korean News Coverage of a Public Health Crisis. Science Communication, 25(4), 399-416.
Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/3123