Through the Lens
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Transcript of Through the Lens
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Through the LensVisual Framing of the Japan Tsunami in U.S., British,
and Chinese Online MediaRosellen Downey, Erika Johnson, and Bailey Brewer
University of Missouri
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LiteratureFraming—lack of visual framing researchTextual elements studied more often (Matthes, 2009)Visual framing and natural disasters
Most on visual framing in war and terrorism Few on natural disasters (Fahmy et al., 2007)
Human interest and political power Human interest frames are an emerging area of
research (Peng, 2004; Schwalbe, 2008; Wojdynski, 2009) Often, political figures studied more than common man
(Grabe & Bucy, 2008)
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Hypotheses and RQs RQ1: Does geographic location of the news outlet relate to the
portrayal of natural disasters? RQ2: Does geographic location of the disaster relate to the portrayal of
the disaster? RQa: Do roles of human beings in photos differ between NPR, BBC, and
Xinhua online coverage and between Japan and other countries? RQb: Does the nationality of human beings shown in photos differ between
NPR, BBC, and Xinhua online coverage and between Japan and other countries?
RQc: Does absence or presence of human beings in photos of flooding differ between NPR, BBC, and Xinhua online coverage and between Japan and other countries?
RQd: Does the number of people shown in photos differ between NPR, BBC, and Xinhua online coverage and between Japan and other countries?
H1: Geographic proximity will be related to disaster portrayal.
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VariablesIVs:
IV1: Nation providing coverage IV2: Nation being covered
DVs:DV1: Role of people/person in the photo DV2: Nationality of people/person in photoDV3: Presence or absence of people in photosDV4: Number of people in the photo.
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SampleN = 242 photosFrom NPR (n = 58), BBC (n = 52), and Xinhua (n
= 132) websitesMarch 11-13, 2011 census sampleSearch term: “Japan tsunami”Images only coded once, no repeatsVideos, infographics, and maps not coded
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ResultsSample – Most frequent in China
China 54.5%U.S. 24%, Britain 21.5%
Japan most frequently covered Most subjects were JapanesePeople present in 66% of photos
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Significant ResultsNation of coverage and roleNation covered and roleNation of coverage and nationalityNation covered and nationalityNation covered and presence of peopleNation covered and number of people
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Role44.4% of civil servants were from other
countries56.6% from Japan
BritainFew government authorities appearing alone
ChinaPredominantly civilian coverage
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NationalityDominance of landscape photos Japanese nationality occurred most in Chinese
coverage
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Human SubjectsHuman subjects outnumbered landscapes
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Number of PeopleFew photos featuring single individualMostly appeared in small and large groups
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DiscussionChina had most visual coverage
Geographic proximityThus, China dominated coverage of civilians,
photos of Japanese subjects, landscape photosXinhua’s practice of capturing frames from video
newsFocus on coverage of humans, not landscape
But, 1/3 of photos were of landscapes overall
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References Fahmy, S., Kelly, J. D., & Yung Soo, K. (2007). What Katrina revealed: A visual analysis
of the hurricane coverage by news wires and U.S. newspapers. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 84(3), 546-561.
Grabe, M., & Bucy, E. (2008). The struggle for control: Visual framing, news coverage, and image handling of presidential candidates, 1992-2004. International Communication Association, 1-42.
Matthes, J. (2009). What’s in a frame? a content analysis of media framing studies in the world’s leading communication journals, 1990-2005. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 86(2), 349-367.
Peng, Z. (2004). Picturing china: A content analysis of photo coverage in the New York Times and Los Angeles Times. International Communication Association, 1+.
Schwalbe, C. B., Silcock, B., & Keith, S. (2008). Visual framing of the early weeks of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq: Applying the master war narrative to electronic and print images. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 52(3), 448-465.
Wojdynski, B. (2009). The interactive newspaper: Online multimedia and the framing of the Iraq War. Conference Papers -- International Communication Association, 1-37.