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Framing disaster: Hurricane Katrina and the national media

Posted on:2010-10-16Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:Miami UniversityCandidate:Dawisha, Nadia KathrynFull Text:PDF
GTID:2448390002981120Subject:Journalism
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis examines the 2005 media coverage of Hurricane Katrina. It analyzes the content and the reasons for the sensationalist reporting which permeated media coverage, and looks at the extent to which racial identity and class level of those affected by the hurricane influenced that media coverage.;The analysis shows that although there was an attempt at some level to provide institutional/structural reasons for why people couldn't leave, especially in The New York Times editorial articles, there was far more emphasis on tales of lawlessness and individual stories. When the media did point to institutional factors, two main challenges arose. First, these issues were often not adequately discussed, especially in television news reports. Second, focus on governmental failures often led to finger pointing at officials, instead of examining how the system as a whole had failed.
Keywords/Search Tags:Media, Hurricane
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