Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study

Newspaper Op-Ed articles are an important form of intellectual debate that communicate views on public policy matters and help shape public opinion. They are challenging, information-rich and persuasive short media texts imbued with worldviews, arguments, sarcasms and biases, hence providing salienc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nashwa Elyamany
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Universitat Oberta de Catalunya 2020-10-01
Series:Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
Subjects:
Online Access:https://analisi.cat/article/view/3215
id doaj-4c9cd40591a04b1d9a7c6626106512e2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4c9cd40591a04b1d9a7c6626106512e22021-09-15T10:24:00ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Universitat Oberta de CatalunyaAnàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura0211-21752340-52362020-10-0110.5565/rev/analisi.32151710Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case StudyNashwa Elyamany0Arab Academy for Science, Technology and Maritime Transport (AASTMT), Smart Village, EgyptNewspaper Op-Ed articles are an important form of intellectual debate that communicate views on public policy matters and help shape public opinion. They are challenging, information-rich and persuasive short media texts imbued with worldviews, arguments, sarcasms and biases, hence providing salience cues regarding key national and international affairs. Recent police killings of citizens in the US have attracted mass coverage in the media, predominantly in the Op-Ed section of The New York Times in 2015. Informed by Critical Discourse Analysis, this case study is a multi-layered qualitative analysis of the Baltimore unrest media coverage, particularly in one article authored by a guest contributor in The New York Times. To identify how the nation-wide case of the Baltimore unrest is rhetorically represented in media discourse, the study is premised on Appraisal Theory and Conceptual Metaphor Theory. The paper aims to: first, pinpoint the inherent appraisal resources used by the author to frame his argument and dialogically position the intended audiences in (dis)alignment with his worldviews; second, showcase the metaphoric repertoire that serves his ideological stance.https://analisi.cat/article/view/3215appraisalattitudeconceptual metaphorengagementgraduation
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nashwa Elyamany
spellingShingle Nashwa Elyamany
Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
appraisal
attitude
conceptual metaphor
engagement
graduation
author_facet Nashwa Elyamany
author_sort Nashwa Elyamany
title Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
title_short Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
title_full Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
title_fullStr Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Media Coverage of the Baltimore Unrest in the Op-Ed of “The New York Times”: A Case Study
title_sort media coverage of the baltimore unrest in the op-ed of “the new york times”: a case study
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
series Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
issn 0211-2175
2340-5236
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Newspaper Op-Ed articles are an important form of intellectual debate that communicate views on public policy matters and help shape public opinion. They are challenging, information-rich and persuasive short media texts imbued with worldviews, arguments, sarcasms and biases, hence providing salience cues regarding key national and international affairs. Recent police killings of citizens in the US have attracted mass coverage in the media, predominantly in the Op-Ed section of The New York Times in 2015. Informed by Critical Discourse Analysis, this case study is a multi-layered qualitative analysis of the Baltimore unrest media coverage, particularly in one article authored by a guest contributor in The New York Times. To identify how the nation-wide case of the Baltimore unrest is rhetorically represented in media discourse, the study is premised on Appraisal Theory and Conceptual Metaphor Theory. The paper aims to: first, pinpoint the inherent appraisal resources used by the author to frame his argument and dialogically position the intended audiences in (dis)alignment with his worldviews; second, showcase the metaphoric repertoire that serves his ideological stance.
topic appraisal
attitude
conceptual metaphor
engagement
graduation
url https://analisi.cat/article/view/3215
work_keys_str_mv AT nashwaelyamany mediacoverageofthebaltimoreunrestintheopedofthenewyorktimesacasestudy
_version_ 1717379118220181504