Qualitative Media AnalysisSAGE Publications, 2012 M10 2 - 168 páginas In order to prepare a successful research project, a qualitative researcher often must consult media documents of various types. Authors David L. Altheide and Christopher J. Schneider show readers how to obtain, categorize, and analyze these different media documents in this entry in the Qualitative Research Methods series. They look at traditional primary documents such as newspapers and magazines but also at more recent forms--television newscasts and cyberspace. The use of student examples of research protocols makes this book a useful primer in deriving meaning from the bombardment of media documents a qualitative researcher faces. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 38
Página 2
... understanding social meanings for actors, including social contexts, situations, and emotions. The focus on perspective and voice in a plethora of qualitative research has also supported more interest in document analysis. In the ...
... understanding social meanings for actors, including social contexts, situations, and emotions. The focus on perspective and voice in a plethora of qualitative research has also supported more interest in document analysis. In the ...
Página 4
... understanding of the varieties of media as features of an ecology of communication. This book addresses the dynamic exchange between substantive research in media and communication, on the one hand, and an adequate method for capturing ...
... understanding of the varieties of media as features of an ecology of communication. This book addresses the dynamic exchange between substantive research in media and communication, on the one hand, and an adequate method for capturing ...
Página 5
... understand culture, social discourse, and social change. We seek to attain this goal by studying documents as representations of social meanings and institutional relations. Documents are studied to understand culture—or the process and ...
... understand culture, social discourse, and social change. We seek to attain this goal by studying documents as representations of social meanings and institutional relations. Documents are studied to understand culture—or the process and ...
Página 6
... understand the meaning and significance of the document. It is the researcher's interest and the relevance of the document plus its retrievable characteristic that characterize a research document. If something is relevant but not ...
... understand the meaning and significance of the document. It is the researcher's interest and the relevance of the document plus its retrievable characteristic that characterize a research document. If something is relevant but not ...
Página 7
... understanding the topic. It seems that we are constantly running across new auxiliary documents as new electronic information bases become available. The hundreds of blogs and commentaries on newspaper and news articles that are ...
... understanding the topic. It seems that we are constantly running across new auxiliary documents as new electronic information bases become available. The hundreds of blogs and commentaries on newspaper and news articles that are ...
Contenido
1 | |
Problems With Studying Documents | 9 |
An Approach to Document Analysis | 12 |
CHAPTER 2 ETHNOGRAPHIC CONTENT ANALYSIS | 23 |
Ethnography in Context | 24 |
Ethnographic Content Analysis | 26 |
Studying Crises | 28 |
Sampling and Data Collection | 31 |
TV Materials | 92 |
Downloading and Storing Files | 95 |
Analysis of TV Reports | 96 |
Project for the New American Century Protocol Sheet | 100 |
CHAPTER 6 ELECTRONIC REALITY II | 103 |
Internet Video Games | 104 |
Social Media and Dealing With the Problem of Riots | 105 |
How It Can Be Studied | 107 |
Data Analysis | 34 |
CHAPTER 3 PROCESS OF QUALITATIVE DOCUMENT ANALYSIS | 39 |
Constructing a Protocol | 44 |
Altheide Research Team Protocol for Studying News Reports About Fear | 48 |
Themes and Frames | 50 |
Theoretical Sampling | 55 |
Stratified Random Sampling | 60 |
Collecting the Data | 62 |
Protocol for Tracking Discourse Fear Crime and Violence | 65 |
Data Analysis | 68 |
CHAPTER 4 NEWSPAPERS MAGAZINES AND ELECTRONIC DOCUMENTS | 75 |
Studying News Magazines | 76 |
Studying Newspapers | 79 |
Exploring Electronic Documents | 83 |
The Double Loop of Analysis | 84 |
Print Media Photos | 87 |
CHAPTER 5 ELECTRONIC REALITY I | 91 |
Sampling and Data Collection | 108 |
Protocol | 110 |
Online Newspaper Websites | 112 |
Data Storage | 113 |
CHAPTER 7 TRACKING DISCOURSE | 115 |
Discourse of Fear | 116 |
Social Media and Discourse | 122 |
CHAPTER 8 FIELD NOTES AND OTHER DATA | 125 |
Accounting for Substance | 126 |
Accounting for Ourselves | 129 |
APPENDIX | 133 |
Selected PhD Dissertations and MA Theses That Use Qualitative Media Analysis | 135 |
Selected Studies of News Organizations | 136 |
REFERENCES | 139 |
INDEX | 147 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Altheide Altheide’s analyzed approach Arizona Republic audience become Chapter coding communication computer file conceptual content analysis coverage crime criminal culture data collection descriptions develop discourse of fear discussed electronic emerge emphasis ethnographic ethnographic content analysis EverQuest examine example Facebook field notes focus focused formats gonzo justice grounded theory headline hyperreality illustrate important information bases information technology interaction Internet investigation involving Iranian hostage crisis issues junkie LexisNexis mass media meaning messages newscast newspaper numerous one’s organization oriented peace perp perspective police Post Your Photos precoded problem protocol qualitative document analysis qualitative media analysis qualitative research referred relevant research questions researcher’s social media social networking sites sources specific suggested symbolic television themes and frames theoretical sampling tion topic tracking discourse understand unit of analysis users Vancouver Sun victims visuals websites word fear YouTube