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The way journalists report on crimes and court cases paints a revealing picture of the role that perpetrators, victims and the question of guilt play in society. This representation has changed over time and reveals a societal shift in values and norms. This thesis analyses this change by means of court reports in order to draw conclusions about the social view of crime and journalistic practice. The theoretical construct behind the analysis is the evolution of court reporting from pamphlet collection to social critique, changing values, and framing as a classification of social reality. A…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The way journalists report on crimes and court cases paints a revealing picture of the role that perpetrators, victims and the question of guilt play in society. This representation has changed over time and reveals a societal shift in values and norms. This thesis analyses this change by means of court reports in order to draw conclusions about the social view of crime and journalistic practice. The theoretical construct behind the analysis is the evolution of court reporting from pamphlet collection to social critique, changing values, and framing as a classification of social reality. A total of 40 court reports published in the news magazine DER SPIEGEL and the daily newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung within two study periods (1980-1989 and 2010-2020) were analyzed.
Autorenporträt
Vanessa Materla (*1992) estudió literatura, historia y periodismo en Constanza, Bergen (Noruega) y Múnich. Completó su formación como editora multimedia en la Escuela Alemana de Periodismo de Múnich. En Berlín trabaja como editora de vídeo y escribe para diversos medios de comunicación online y escritos.