Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria
The Arab Spring has generated unprecedented attention to the Arab world in Western news media. This paper presents a comparative study of Danish press coverage of the uprisings in Tunisia and Syria during the early months of the Arab Spring (January-March 2011). The study is based on a mixed quan...
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FU Berlin, University of Erfurt
2012-05-01
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doaj-e1e246fbd9914226a4303f2cc70b86eb2021-09-02T13:11:22ZdeuFU Berlin, University of ErfurtGlobal Media Journal: German Edition2196-48072196-48072012-05-0121Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and SyriaMikkel Fugl EskjærThe Arab Spring has generated unprecedented attention to the Arab world in Western news media. This paper presents a comparative study of Danish press coverage of the uprisings in Tunisia and Syria during the early months of the Arab Spring (January-March 2011). The study is based on a mixed quantitative and qualitative content analysis aimed at identifying patterns of news reporting of the Arab Spring. The investigation looks into whether temporal developments of the Arab revolutions, the level of journalistic presence in the region, and national differences influence Danish press coverage of the Arab Spring. The findings indicate that media coverage of the Arab Spring points in different directions. On the one hand there has been a remarkable increase in media attention to the Middle East in purely quantitative terms. On the other hand the study finds that a number of traditional media patterns persist, not least in relation to media perceptions of Islam and democracy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and the ability to reform the Arab world from the inside.http://www.db-thueringen.de/servlets/DerivateServlet/Derivate-25445/GMJ3_Fugl_final.pdfArab Springnews mediaDanish pressnews reportingcontent analysisSyriaTunisia |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mikkel Fugl Eskjær |
spellingShingle |
Mikkel Fugl Eskjær Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria Global Media Journal: German Edition Arab Spring news media Danish press news reporting content analysis Syria Tunisia |
author_facet |
Mikkel Fugl Eskjær |
author_sort |
Mikkel Fugl Eskjær |
title |
Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria |
title_short |
Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria |
title_full |
Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria |
title_fullStr |
Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria |
title_full_unstemmed |
Changing Revolutions, Changing Attention? Comparing Danish Press Coverage of the Arab Spring in Tunisia and Syria |
title_sort |
changing revolutions, changing attention? comparing danish press coverage of the arab spring in tunisia and syria |
publisher |
FU Berlin, University of Erfurt |
series |
Global Media Journal: German Edition |
issn |
2196-4807 2196-4807 |
publishDate |
2012-05-01 |
description |
The Arab Spring has generated unprecedented attention to the Arab world in Western
news media. This paper presents a comparative study of Danish press coverage of the uprisings in
Tunisia and Syria during the early months of the Arab Spring (January-March 2011). The study is
based on a mixed quantitative and qualitative content analysis aimed at identifying patterns of
news reporting of the Arab Spring. The investigation looks into whether temporal developments of
the Arab revolutions, the level of journalistic presence in the region, and national differences
influence Danish press coverage of the Arab Spring.
The findings indicate that media coverage of the Arab Spring points in different directions. On the
one hand there has been a remarkable increase in media attention to the Middle East in purely
quantitative terms. On the other hand the study finds that a number of traditional media patterns
persist, not least in relation to media perceptions of Islam and democracy, the Arab-Israeli conflict,
and the ability to reform the Arab world from the inside. |
topic |
Arab Spring news media Danish press news reporting content analysis Syria Tunisia |
url |
http://www.db-thueringen.de/servlets/DerivateServlet/Derivate-25445/GMJ3_Fugl_final.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mikkelfugleskjær changingrevolutionschangingattentioncomparingdanishpresscoverageofthearabspringintunisiaandsyria |
_version_ |
1721175159040114688 |