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Fans of the Olympic Games would find it difficult, if not impossible, to experience them without the media as intermediary. This book performs the important task of analysing ways in which the media serves as both an integral component and an arbiter of the Games for society. This book was originally published as a special issue of Mass Communication and Society.
Fans of the Olympic Games would find it difficult, if not impossible, to experience them without the media as intermediary. This book performs the important task of analysing ways in which the media serves as both an integral component and an arbiter of the Games for society. This book was originally published as a special issue of Mass Communication and Society.
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Kim Bissell is the Director of the Institute for Communication and Information Research, and the Associate Dean for Research in the College of Communication and Information Sciences at the University of Alabama, USA. She has published more than 30 research articles in peer reviewed journals and several book chapters. Her research interests include the intersection of media, health, and sport in the context of media effects and media messages. Stephen D. Perry is the Editor of Mass Communication and Society, and is the Mass Media Coordinator and Professor at Illinois State University, USA. He is co-author of Communication Theories for Everyday Life (2003) and author of A Consolidated History of Media (2005), as well as many book chapters and research articles in peer-reviewed journals. His research interests include media effects on society, and media history.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Olympics, Media, and Society 2. The Olympics, Jesse Owens, Burke, and The implications of Media Framing in Symbolic Boasting Part I: The 2008 Summer Games 3. Fans, Nonfans, and the Olympics: Predictors of Audience's Multiplatform Experience with the 2008 Beijing Games 4. The Expediency of Hybridity: Beijing 2008 5. Media Reports of Olympic Success by Chinese and American Gold Medalists: Cultural Differences in Causal Attribution 6. "Under the Weather": The Weather Effects on U.S. Newspaper Coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympics Part II: The 2010 Winter Games 7. When Symbols Clash: Legitimacy, Legality and the 2010 Winter Olympics 8. Go "Heavy" or Go Home: An Examination of Audience Attitudes and Their Relationship to Gender Cues in the 2010 Olympic Snowboarding Coverage 9. "The More Things Change, The More They . . .": Commentary During Women's Ice Hockey at the 2010 Olympic Games
1. Introduction: Olympics, Media, and Society 2. The Olympics, Jesse Owens, Burke, and The implications of Media Framing in Symbolic Boasting Part I: The 2008 Summer Games 3. Fans, Nonfans, and the Olympics: Predictors of Audience's Multiplatform Experience with the 2008 Beijing Games 4. The Expediency of Hybridity: Beijing 2008 5. Media Reports of Olympic Success by Chinese and American Gold Medalists: Cultural Differences in Causal Attribution 6. "Under the Weather": The Weather Effects on U.S. Newspaper Coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympics Part II: The 2010 Winter Games 7. When Symbols Clash: Legitimacy, Legality and the 2010 Winter Olympics 8. Go "Heavy" or Go Home: An Examination of Audience Attitudes and Their Relationship to Gender Cues in the 2010 Olympic Snowboarding Coverage 9. "The More Things Change, The More They . . .": Commentary During Women's Ice Hockey at the 2010 Olympic Games
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