Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents

In recent years, scholars have shown increasing interest in the concept of collective memory for structuring modern social understanding and political dialogue. However, surprisingly few studies have looked at the role that news media play the processes of collective political memory construction, r...

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Main Author: Patterson, Jeffery Randolph
Format: Others
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/28140
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-281402015-09-20T17:28:58ZPublic memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidentsPatterson, Jeffery RandolphCollective memoryHistoryPolitical mediaPresidentsFramingSocial constructivismPublic memoryPublic sphereMedia effectsPolitical leadershipFrame transformationAttribute agenda settingMedia sub-framesIn recent years, scholars have shown increasing interest in the concept of collective memory for structuring modern social understanding and political dialogue. However, surprisingly few studies have looked at the role that news media play the processes of collective political memory construction, reinterpretation, and change. This study contributes to the literature on collective memory construction, by helping clarify the means by which different news media serve as a site where collective memory is constructed, reinforced, and revised; and, 2) to identify which political actors and institutions act as sources to assert particular memory frames and what media subsidies they offer to influence the memory construction process. Specifically, the study undertook a two-stage longitudinal content analysis of news media to discern the ways former U.S. presidents (i.e., Truman, Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, and Ford) were memorialized in news media coverage at the time of their funerals, and then again in subsequent news media stories through 2012. The content analysis identified dominant news media frames and secondary attribute sub-frames as applied to former U.S. Presidents, and which news media sources and frame advocates are engaged in setting those frames. As a result, the study identified patterns of change and resilience in particular presidential memory frames as represented in news media, and found journalists—beyond other sources and frame advocates—play a significant role in both creating and revising those memories over time. A range of opportunities for further research are discussed.text2015-01-20T20:31:10Z2014-052015-01-20May 20142015-01-20T20:31:10ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/28140
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Collective memory
History
Political media
Presidents
Framing
Social constructivism
Public memory
Public sphere
Media effects
Political leadership
Frame transformation
Attribute agenda setting
Media sub-frames
spellingShingle Collective memory
History
Political media
Presidents
Framing
Social constructivism
Public memory
Public sphere
Media effects
Political leadership
Frame transformation
Attribute agenda setting
Media sub-frames
Patterson, Jeffery Randolph
Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
description In recent years, scholars have shown increasing interest in the concept of collective memory for structuring modern social understanding and political dialogue. However, surprisingly few studies have looked at the role that news media play the processes of collective political memory construction, reinterpretation, and change. This study contributes to the literature on collective memory construction, by helping clarify the means by which different news media serve as a site where collective memory is constructed, reinforced, and revised; and, 2) to identify which political actors and institutions act as sources to assert particular memory frames and what media subsidies they offer to influence the memory construction process. Specifically, the study undertook a two-stage longitudinal content analysis of news media to discern the ways former U.S. presidents (i.e., Truman, Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, and Ford) were memorialized in news media coverage at the time of their funerals, and then again in subsequent news media stories through 2012. The content analysis identified dominant news media frames and secondary attribute sub-frames as applied to former U.S. Presidents, and which news media sources and frame advocates are engaged in setting those frames. As a result, the study identified patterns of change and resilience in particular presidential memory frames as represented in news media, and found journalists—beyond other sources and frame advocates—play a significant role in both creating and revising those memories over time. A range of opportunities for further research are discussed. === text
author Patterson, Jeffery Randolph
author_facet Patterson, Jeffery Randolph
author_sort Patterson, Jeffery Randolph
title Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
title_short Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
title_full Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
title_fullStr Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
title_full_unstemmed Public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
title_sort public memory and political history : news media and collective memory construction after the deaths of former presidents
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/28140
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