Academic literature on the topic 'Death in mass media'

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Journal articles on the topic "Death in mass media":

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Stratton, Jon. "Death and the Spectacle in Television and Social Media." Television & New Media 21, no. 1 (November 14, 2018): 3–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527476418810547.

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Social media are pervaded by death. This article utilizes ideas drawn primarily from the work of Guy Debord—the society of the spectacle—and Jean Baudrillard—his discussion of death in Symbolic Exchange and Death, to think through the significance of death on social media. Debord argued that the consequence of the ubiquity of the mass media, and television in particular, and their increasing imbrication with consumption capitalism, was that social relations are increasingly lived as spectacle. At the same time, in the modern world, death has become increasingly separated from life. No longer integrated into social life, death has become the feared and meaningless end of life, which is to be preserved at all costs. The death that is now meaningful is not “natural” death but violent death. Social media is full of unnatural deaths including beheadings and suicide. This article discusses the pervasiveness of these on social media.
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Schwartz, Pepper. "Stage Fright or Death Wish: Sociology in the Mass Media." Contemporary Sociology 27, no. 5 (September 1998): 439. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2654472.

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Artman, Nicholas, Zack Stiegler, Brandon Szuminsky, and Matthew Albright. "Mass media in the mobile village." Explorations in Media Ecology 19, no. 2 (June 1, 2020): 139–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/eme_00031_1.

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As a constantly connected environment via the Internet and mobile technology, the mobile village reconstructed the means by which content reaches a mass audience. To successfully navigate this environment, audiences must adjust to the new dynamics imposed by mobile technologies. This article examines mass media technologies and practices in an attempt to assess the practical impact of the mobile village within the production, distribution and consumption of media and information. Journalism is now judged less by the news it provides than by the process by which it is produced. Many proclaim the death of radio as traditional broadcast formats become antiquated, however, thanks to increased hardware mobility and bandwidth speeds, podcasts and music streaming services continue to draw listeners. Lastly, television, long a medium fixed in domestic space and oriented around synchronous mass consumption, now streams on demand to mobile devices via wireless Internet connections.
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TREND, DAVID. "Merchants of Death: Media Violence and American Empire." Harvard Educational Review 73, no. 3 (September 1, 2003): 285–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.17763/haer.73.3.p3666k82135627qm.

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In this article, David Trend illuminates the centrality of violent narratives in U.S. popular culture. He describes the ubiquity of violent imagery and the popular discourse it has generated. Trend argues that research on media violence has created a large academic subculture that has done little to advance our understanding of who is watching violent media and why. He draws on multidisciplinary sources and calls for scholars to collaborate across fields to reframe the discussion. He concludes that the mass production of violent media may be wasting an enormous resource that might otherwise be used for tremendous public good.
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Lipschultz, Jeremy H., and Michael L. Hilt. "Mass media and the death penalty: Social construction of three Nebraska executions." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 43, no. 2 (March 1, 1999): 236–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08838159909364487.

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Clarke, Juanne. "Heart disease and gender in mass print media." Menopause International 14, no. 1 (March 2008): 18–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/mi.2007.007035.

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Heart disease is a major cause of death, disease and disability in the developed world for both men and women. Nevertheless, the evidence suggests that women are under-diagnosed both because they fail to visit the doctor with relevant symptoms and because doctors tend to dismiss the seriousness of women's symptoms of heart disease. This study examines the way that popular mass print media present the possible links between gender and heart disease. The findings suggest that the ‘usual candidates’ for heart disease are considered to be high achieving and active men for whom the ‘heart attack’ is sometimes seen as a ‘badge of honour’ and a symbol of their success. In contrast, women are less often seen as likely to succumb, but they are portrayed as if they are and ought to be worried about their husbands. Women's own bodies are described as so problematic as to be perhaps useless to diagnose, because they are so difficult to understand and treat.
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Murukutla, Nandita, Hongjin Yan, Shuo Wang, Nalin Singh Negi, Alexey Kotov, Sandra Mullin, and Mark Goodchild. "Cost-effectiveness of a smokeless tobacco control mass media campaign in India." Tobacco Control 27, no. 5 (August 10, 2017): 547–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2016-053564.

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BackgroundTobacco control mass media campaigns are cost-effective in reducing tobacco consumption in high-income countries, but similar evidence from low-income countries is limited. An evaluation of a 2009 smokeless tobacco control mass media campaign in India provided an opportunity to test its cost-effectiveness.MethodsCampaign evaluation data from a nationally representative household survey of 2898 smokeless tobacco users were compared with campaign costs in a standard cost-effectiveness methodology. Costs and effects of the Surgeon campaign were compared with the status quo to calculate the cost per campaign-attributable benefit, including quit attempts, permanent quits and tobacco-related deaths averted. Sensitivity analyses at varied CIs and tobacco-related mortality risk were conducted.ResultsThe Surgeon campaign was found to be highly cost-effective. It successfully generated 17 259 148 additional quit attempts, 431 479 permanent quits and 120 814 deaths averted. The cost per benefit was US$0.06 per quit attempt, US$2.6 per permanent quit and US$9.2 per death averted. The campaign continued to be cost-effective in sensitivity analyses.ConclusionThis study suggests that tobacco control mass media campaigns can be cost-effective and economically justified in low-income and middle-income countries. It holds significant policy implications, calling for sustained investment in evidence-based mass media campaigns as part of a comprehensive tobacco control strategy.
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Zholud, Roman V., and Viktoria V. Fursova. "“Death Groups”: The Media Construction of a Social Problem in the Post-Truth Society." Vestnik NSU. Series: History and Philology 19, no. 6 (2020): 121–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2020-19-6-121-130.

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The article discusses the features of media construction of a social problem by the Russian media on the example of the case of “death groups” (2015–2017) in the context of the influence of post-truth society on mass communication. The analysis reveals factors that form the misstatement in vision of a social problem; an analogy is drawn with the spread of fake news in the media. Special attention is paid to the role of the government in the media construction of the social problem of “death groups” and its ideological content. Based on the study, it is concluded that in post-truth society, media construction of a social problem proceeds with an emotional, uncritical perception of false, ideologically sharpened information. The gathered facts show a dismatch between the media representation of “death groups” and their real social sense.
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Alexis-Martin, Becky. "Sensing the deathscape: Digital media and death during COVID-19." Journal of Environmental Media 1, no. 2 (August 1, 2020): 11.1–11.8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jem_00032_1.

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Across cultures, death has traditionally encompassed diverse material and ritual assemblages. Funeral practices are a unifying element of death, presenting an opportunity for communal memorialization of the deceased. These practices are environmentally embedded, spanning traditional graveyards and floral memorials, to contemporary green burials and body farms. However, COVID-19 has disrupted socio-environmental practices, due to disease transmission concerns that have manifested new constraints to funerary space. Here, I contemplate the digital deathscape during COVID-19 through three vignettes: the first considers Hart Island mass-burial drone footage and the emergence of a necropticon. The second vignette considers the emergence of domestic deathscapes and their significance to digitally broadcast (DB) funerals. The third vignette, Billy’s funeral, gives interview-based insights into the porous domestic deathscape of a DB funeral guest, Samantha. All three vignettes contemplate the experience of remotely sensing the deathscape and the scenarios that arise when traditionally hidden or ‘in-place’ death rituals arise ‘out-of-place’.
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Hoskins, Andrew. "Media and compassion after digital war: Why digital media haven't transformed responses to human suffering in contemporary conflict." International Review of the Red Cross 102, no. 913 (April 2020): 117–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1816383121000102.

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AbstractThere is a persistent belief in the power of media images to transform the events they depict. Yet despite the instant availability of billions of images of human suffering and death in the continuous and connective digital glare of social media, the catastrophes of contemporary wars, such as in Syria and Yemen, unfold relentlessly. There are repeated expressions of surprise by some in the West when the dissemination of images of suffering and wars, particularly in mainstream news media, does not translate into a de-escalation of conflict.In this article I consider today's loosening of the often presumed relationship between media representation, knowledge and response under the conditions of “digital war”. This is the digital disruption of the relationship between warfare and society in which all sides participate in the uploading and sharing of information on, and images and videos of, conflict.Is it the case that the capacity of images of human injury and death to bring about change, and the expectation that they would stir practical intervention in wars, is and has been exaggerated? Even if we are moved or shocked upon being confronted by such images, does this translate into some form of action, individual or otherwise? In this article I contend that the saturation of information and images of human suffering and death in contemporary warfare has not ushered in a new era of “compassion fatigue”. Rather, algorithmically charged outrage is a proxy for effects. It is easy to misconstrue the velocity of linking and liking and sharing as some kind of mass action or mass movement.Humanitarian catastrophes slowly unfold in an age of continuous and connective digital glare, and yet they are unseen. If the imploded battlefield of digital war affording the most proximate and persistent view of human suffering and death in history cannot ultimately mobilize radically effective forms of public response, it is difficult to imagine what will.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Death in mass media":

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Anderson, Tonya Benshoff Harry M. "24, Lost, and Six feet under post-traumatic television in the post 9/11 era /." [Denton, Tex.] : University of North Texas, 2008. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-6137.

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Bishop, Matthew R. "Iraqi Civilian Death in American Mass Media| The Causes and Consequences of Silence." Thesis, The George Washington University, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1586654.

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This thesis sets out to explain the causes and consequences of American mass media silence on the subject of civilian death in Iraq in the 2003-2012 war. The thesis finds the principal causes of silence to be: The embedding program, the need for fast, marketable, American-sourced "officialdom", the cultural-political shift to the right after 9/11 and the rise of Fox News, the takeover of advertising interests in media executive management, and various psychological causes including group diffusion of responsibility. The thesis finds the principal consequence of media silence to be dehumanization through omission, effecting widespread American public ignorance (and consequent apathy) of civilian death in Iraq. The concept dehumanization through omission is introduced in this thesis as a variant of traditional dehumanization that can be either intentional or naturally occurring. In this particular variant, the absence of like-identification across ingroups and outgroups, the absence of socially supportive affiliates interested in forming a humanizing counter-narrative, the denial of and disinterest regarding ingroup sin, the denial of event importance, the denial of individual agency, occasional overt dehumanization, sustained infrahumanization, and finally the assumption on the part of the American people that their media was vigilant against civilian death paired with that media's actual and complete absence of vigilance against death and against the delegitimizing and prevailing war narrative, form a dehumanization that is softer, quieter, and more elusive than overt propaganda, but which in all likelihood is just as fatal to those who suffer its consequences.

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Davis, Therese Verdun, of Western Sydney Hawkesbury University, and Faculty of Social Inquiry. "Becoming unrecognisable : a study of the face, death and recognition in late twentieth century media culture." THESIS_FSI_SEL_Davis_T.xml, 2000. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/298.

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The thesis argues that to find the places in media culture where the face transmits death, we need to look beyond the immobilised faces of the dead. Drawing on Walter Benjamin's philosophy of the image, the thesis sees the phenomenon of becoming unrecognisable as a particular practice of the image in which the face becomes a viable site for making death transmissible. It is argued that by paying attention to instances in media culture in which a face becomes unrecognisable, we can see how death is made visible as a dialectic between recognition and unrecognisability, appearance and disappearance. By examining the complexity of this particular form of dialectical image in a wide range of media - photography, television and film - the thesis shifts discussion away from questions of representation and faciality that feature so strongly in recent theorisations of the face. Focussing on questions of recognition and recognisability, the thesis proposes a way of thinking about the face that leads to a new conception of death in the media age
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Hanusch, Folker. "The coverage of death in the foreign news of German and Australian quality newspapers /." [St. Lucia, Qld.], 2006. http://adt.library.uq.edu.au/public/adt-QU20060529.102615/index.html.

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Stott, Rebecca Kathleen. "The kiss of death : a demystification of the late-nineteenth century 'femme fatale' in the works of Bram Stoker, Rider Haggard, Joseph Conrad and Thomas Hardy." Thesis, University of York, 1989. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/4267/.

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The thesis takes its beginnings from the work of Mario Praz, The Romantic Agony and from Michel Foucault's The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1. Praz has argued that the construction of the 'femme fatale' as a recognizable type is a phenomenon of the late nineteenth century. Foucault proposes that the nineteenth century is characterised not by a repression of sexual discourses but by a multiplication of centres from which such discourses are produced. The thesis places the 'femme fatale' in the socio-historical context of the 90s and searches both for the plurality of discourses mobilised to define her, and for her presence in other non-literary discourses of the period such as those of evolutionary theory, craniology, criminology and imperialist discourses. It locates this figure in a wide range of contexts: late nineteenth-century debates about female sexuality, biological determinism, theories of decadence and degeneration, invasion anxieties and the censorship debate. It juxtaposes two 'popular' novelists (Stoker and Haggard) with two 'major' novelists (Conrad and Hardy) to demonstrate that the particular discourses mobilised to describe the 'femme fatale' are to be found in works of differing literary 'quality' and in different literary genres. Chapter One examines the representation of the female vampires in Bram Stoker's Dracula in the context of Foucauldian theory about the production of sexual discourses in medicine and science in this period. These 'sexualised' women are contagious and must be annihilated. Chapter No explores the conflation of sexual and imperialist discourses in Rider Haggard's adventure fiction, particularly in She and King Solomon's Mines. Ayesha is an invading sexual being and FET- 'death in the flames can be seen as a 'devolution' into a 'monkey woman': an unveiling. This chapter also examines the other female 'missing links' of Haggard's fiction. Chapter Three continues the exploration of sexual and imperialist discourses, here in the early novels of Conrad: Almayer's Folly and An Outcast of the Islands, in particular. It explores the way in which Conrad's native women merge into jungle landscapes and into twilight; they signify the threatening 'otherness' of the jungle and of language. This chapter concludes with an examination of Winnie Verloc of the Secret Agent as female murderess and as 'free woman'. Chapter Four focuses on Hardy's Tess as victim and as murderess. It proposes a reading of Tess of the d'Urbervilles as a response to the enforced censorship of the text (Tess) expressed via the moral censure and execution of Tess. A short theoretical Afterword draws on feminist theory and Derridean analysis of phallocentrism to propose that the 'femme fatale' of this period is a sign signifying a multiple or conflated 'otherness': a multiplicity of cultural anxieties.
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Davis, Therese Verdun. "Becoming unrecognisable : a study of the face, death and recognition in late twentieth century media culture /." View thesis View thesis, 2000. http://library.uws.edu.au/adt-NUWS/public/adt-NUWS20030429.171809/index.html.

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Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury, 2000.
"A thesis presented to the University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy". Bibliography : leaves 188-199.
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Lyons, Sara J. Lyons Sara J. "The sacrifice of honey (fiction) : The depiction of the media in The shark net, Evil angels and The sacrifice of honey (thesis) /." Connect to this title, 2006. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2006.0055.

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Louine, Jeannice LaToya. "Media Portrayals of Police-Involved Deaths in U.S. Newspapers, 2013-2016." Thesis, Mississippi State University, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10840703.

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In the past five years, there have been numerous newspaper reports on police-involved deaths (PID) in the U.S, many of which have involved African American males as victims (Shane, Lawson, & Swenson, 2017). Police-involved deaths (PID) is defined as a death of an individual that results from police action (i.e., by firearm, by electroshock weapon [commonly known as a Taser©], or by vehicle). Given the amount of coverage of police-involved deaths, it is important to investigate which PID victims receive the most coverage in U.S. newspapers. This study merges three databases (Fatal Encounters , the Washington Post, and the Guardian ) which collect information about PID cases that occurred in the U.S. Once a list of PID victims was compiled, Nexis Uni (formerly Nexis Lexis) was used to obtain U.S. newspapers that covered PID incidents. In this study, I examine the race, age, region, and manner of death to distinguish which of these independent variables are the strongest predictors of the number of words and articles used in describing PID incidents. Using a linear regression model, the findings indicate that PID incidents involving African American males had significantly more articles and words written about them than PID incidents involving non-African American males and this effect remained after controlling for other correlates of PID incidents. Additionally, PID incidents involving firearm deaths received significantly more media attention as well. Given the amount of newspaper coverage on PID victims, the ways in which the media portray the victims in those contexts can influence the criminal process for officers involved in the killing. In addition, media portrayals of these incidents can impact policies that revamp the ways in which officers communicate with people of color, specifically African American men (i.e., cultural sensitivity training).

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Sherrick, Brett I. "Some disassembly required understanding the deaths of the player-character self in Call of duty 4 /." View electronic thesis (PDF), 2009. http://dl.uncw.edu/etd/2009-1/sherrickb/brettsherrick.pdf.

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Lyons, Sara J. "The sacrifice of honey (fiction) ; The depiction of the media in The shark net, Evil angels and The sacrifice of honey (thesis)." University of Western Australia. English, Communication and Cultural Studies Discipline Group, 2006. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2006.0055.

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Books on the topic "Death in mass media":

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Dotan, Natan. The Life and Death of Mass Media. [New York, N.Y.?]: [publisher not identified], 2014.

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Kwasik, Kamila, Kamila Kwasik, and Jan Jaroszyński. Media wobec śmierci. Warszawa: ELIPSA, 2012.

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Sumiala, Johanna. Media and ritual: Death, community, and everyday life. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2012.

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Cinquegrani, Mattia. Il rito, la morte e l'immagine: Cinema, televisione, media digitali. Roma: Bulzoni editore, 2020.

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Smith, Jane Monckton. Relating rape and murder: Narratives of sex, death and gender. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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Sánchez, Pedro A. Cruz. La muerte (in)visible: Verdad, ficción y posficción en la imagen contemporánea. Murcia: Tabvlarivm, 2005.

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Hirdman, Anja. Döden i medierna: Våld, tröst och fascination. Stockholm: Carlssons, 2012.

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Schechter, Danny. The death of media and the fight to save democracy. Hoboken, N.J: Melville House, 2005.

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Hanusch, Folker. Representing death in the news: Journalism, media and mortality. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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Charles, Gerard. The media of the republic. Greensborough, Vic: Steele Wilson Books, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Death in mass media":

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Langford, Barry. "Mass Culture/Mass Media/Mass Death: Teaching Film, Television, and the Holocaust." In Teaching Holocaust Literature and Film, 63–77. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230591806_6.

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Davies, Jon. "Vile Bodies and Mass Media Chantries." In Contemporary Issues in the Sociology of Death, Dying and Disposal, 47–59. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24303-7_4.

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Murray, Jennifer Lynn. "The Mass Killer’s Search for Validation through Infamy, Media Attention and Transcendence." In The Death and Resurrection of Deviance, 235–51. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137303806_13.

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Have, Iben, and Birgitte Stougaard Pedersen. "Reading Audiobooks." In Beyond Media Borders, Volume 1, 197–216. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49679-1_6.

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Abstract The development of digital media technologies like the MP3 file and the smartphone has changed the status of the audiobook from being a by-product of the printed book to being a mass medium in its own right. This chapter takes a context and user perspective on audiobooks and asks the fundamental question: to what extent can one say that one ‘reads’ an audiobook? Based on the Danish author Helle Helle’s novel Ned til hundene (Down to the Dogs, 2008), the authors discuss how the audiobook experience as a whole can be analysed regarding ‘technological framing’, ‘reading situations’ and ‘the performing voice’. They also investigate audiobook reading in relation to the experience of time and depth.
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Newton, Kenneth. "Mass Media." In Developments in British Politics 2, 313–26. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-10230-3_15.

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Fog, Agner. "Mass Media." In Cultural Selection, 156–68. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-9251-2_9.

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Bilton, Tony, Kevin Bonnett, Pip Jones, Tony Lawson, David Skinner, Michelle Stanworth, Andrew Webster, Liz Bradbury, James Stanyer, and Paul Stephens. "Mass media." In Introductory Sociology, 328–53. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-230-21417-0_12.

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Fenton, Natalie. "Mass Media." In Sociology, 297–320. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-27552-6_14.

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Selfe, P. L. "Mass Media." In Advanced Sociology, 143–54. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13093-1_9.

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Jucker, Andreas H. "Mass media." In Handbook of Pragmatics, 1–14. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hop.1.mas1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Death in mass media":

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ANINDYA, CHIARA. "Reporting Death Executions as a Media Event in Indonesia’s Contemporary Online Press." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications. Global science and Technology Forum (GSTF), 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3710_jmcomm15.13.

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Jena, Sofen K., and Swarup K. Mahapatra. "Effect of Participating Medium Radiation and Nano-Fluidic Behaviour of Atmospheric Aerosol on Natural Convection of Industrial Dusty Air." In ASME 2013 4th International Conference on Micro/Nanoscale Heat and Mass Transfer. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/mnhmt2013-22259.

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The current study is focused on thermal radiation interaction with the natural convection of atmospheric brown cloud (ABC). The current study puts emphasis on ultra fine carbon-black particle suspension of several nano meter range along with some pollutant gas mixture with atmospheric air. The numerical simulation of double diffusive thermo-gravitational convection of ABC is done with Hide and Mason laboratory model for atmosphere. The effect of flow circulation is simulated by setting different value of buoyancy ratios. The effect of participating media radiation has been investigated for various values of optical depth. The governing equations, describing circulation of ABC are solved using modified Marker and Cell method. Gradient dependent consistent hybrid upwind scheme of second order is used for discretization of the convective terms. Discrete ordinate method, with S8 approximation is used to solve radiative transport equation. Comprehensive studies on controlling parameters that affect the flow and heat transfer characteristics have been addressed. The results are provided in graphical and tabular form to delineate the flow behavior and heat transfer characteristics.
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Bakhtiyarov, Sayavur I., and Ruel A. Overfelt. "Numerical Simulation and Experimental Study of Suspension Flow With Deposition in Porous Media: Application to Sand Core Coating in Metalcasting Industry." In ASME 2003 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2003-43499.

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A diffusion flux principle of mass conservation was used for mathematical modeling of sand core coating process. A Galerkin method with linear axisymmetric square finite elements was used to solve the problem. It is shown that the coating thickness and the penetration depth increase with sand grain size. With increasing the apparent viscosity of the refractory coating slurry the coating thickness increase, but the penetration depth decreases linearly. A good agreement is found between the experimental data and numerical predictions.
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Naydenko, Vitaly Nikolaevich. "Legal Regulation of the Sphere of Prevention and Suppression of Ethnic and National Conflicts." In All-Russian Scientific Conference. Publishing house Sreda, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31483/r-98712.

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Abstract: In the course of the study of the problems of legal regulation of the ethno-conflict sphere, the author of the article conducted a survey (using the methods of questionnaires and in-depth interviews) of 20 experts who are highly qualified specialists in the field of countering ethno-national conflicts, studied the results of mass sociological research, analyzed scientific works and media publications. As a result, the most effective legal measures for regulating the prevention and suppression of ethnic and national conflicts were identified, and the main directions for their improvement in the interests of strengthening the Russian statehood were identified.
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Pitié, F. "Using One Graph-Cut to Fuse Multiple Candidate Maps in Depth Estimation." In 2009 Conference for Visual Media Production (CVMP). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvmp.2009.21.

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Marić, Jasmina. "The Valleys of Death in Refugee Crisis." In 2017 International Conference On Social Media, Wearable And Web Analytics (Social Media). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/socialmedia.2017.8057357.

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Gratton, Luca J. "Transient Stefan Flows at Wet and Heated Equipment Boundaries." In ASME 2005 Power Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pwr2005-50139.

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With emphasis on thermal losses from internally heated equipment in process applications, the results of conjugate heat and mass transfer modeling are presented for a category of Stefan flow involving vaporization in a semi-permeable heterogeneous media. The model simulates the initial stages of the drying process for wet, partially saturated insulation material abutting heated equipment. Dimensionless forms of the governing equations constitute the model basis for a transient, one-dimensional problem abstraction. Numerical solutions are obtained using finite-difference techniques. Model results are presented to demonstrate drying rate variation at high heat rates in the materials of interest to the applications. Summary results include drying rate, saturation distribution, and fluid velocity profiles with comparison of observed drying front penetration depth to existing literature.
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Lomax, Jamie R. "Constraining the mass loss geometry of beta Lyrae." In STELLAR POLARIMETRY: FROM BIRTH TO DEATH. AIP, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3701918.

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Sargent, Benjamin, Sundar Srinivasan, David Riebel, and Margaret Meixner. "Polarization and studies of evolved star mass loss." In STELLAR POLARIMETRY: FROM BIRTH TO DEATH. AIP, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3701921.

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Kasperovich-Rynkevich, Olga Nikolaevna. "Media economically oriented tecnologies in mass media activity." In Internationa Extra-murral Online Conference. TSNS Interaktiv Plus, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21661/r-112426.

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This article explores cost-effective mass media technologies. The experience of the use of paid access to the media content of Belarus was studied, the author also made the forecast on its future functioning. The paper provides global media industry trends and focuses on the use of messagers to promote content and increase the target audience of mass media. The research used the methods of content analysis and a written survey. During the study the author revealed that the media economically oriented technologies help to make a profit through distribution of content and formation of a loyal mass media audience.

Reports on the topic "Death in mass media":

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Velázquez, A., D. Renó, AM Beltrán Flandoli, JC Maldonado Vivanco, and C. Ortiz León. From the mass media to social media: reflections on the new media ecology. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, March 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2018-1270en.

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Chornodon, Myroslava. FEAUTURES OF GENDER IN MODERN MASS MEDIA. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.49.11064.

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The article clarifies of gender identity stereotypes in modern media. The main gender stereotypes covered in modern mass media are analyzed and refuted. The model of gender relations in the media is reflected mainly in the stereotypical images of men and woman. The features of the use of gender concepts in modern periodicals for women and men were determined. The most frequently used derivatives of these macroconcepts were identified and analyzed in detail. It has been found that publications for women and men are full of various gender concepts that are used in different contexts. Ingeneral, theanalysisofthe concept-maximums and concept-minimum gender and their characteristics is carried out in the context of gender stereotypes that have been forme dand function in the society, system atizing the a ctual presentations. The study of the gender concept is relevant because it reveals new trends and features of modern gender images. Taking into account the special features of gender-labeled periodicals in general and the practical absence of comprehensive scientific studies of the gender concept in particular, there is a need to supplement Ukrainian science with this topic. Gender psychology, which is served by methods of various sciences, primarily sociological, pedagogical, linguistic, psychological, socio-psychological. Let us pay attention to linguistic and psycholinguistic methods in gender studies. Linguistic methods complement intelligence research tasks, associated with speech, word and text. Psycholinguistic methods used in gender psychology (semantic differential, semantic integral, semantic analysis of words and texts), aimed at studying speech messages, specific mechanisms of origin and perception, functions of speech activity in society, studying the relationship between speech messages and gender properties participants in the communication, to analyze the linguistic development in connection with the general development of the individual. Nowhere in gender practice there is the whole arsenal of psychological methods that allow you to explore psychological peculiarities of a person like observation, experiments, questionnaires, interviews, testing, modeling, etc. The methods of psychological self-diagnostics include: the gender aspect of the own socio-psychological portrait, a gender biography as a variant of the biographical method, aimed at the reconstruction of individual social experience. In the process of writing a gender autobiography, a person can understand the characteristics of his gender identity, as well as ways and means of their formation. Socio-psychological methods of studying gender include the study of socially constructed women’s and men’s roles, relationships and identities, sexual characteristics, psychological characteristics, etc. The use of gender indicators and gender approaches as a means of socio-psychological and sociological analysis broadens the subject boundaries of these disciplines and makes them the subject of study within these disciplines. And also, in the article a combination of concrete-historical, structural-typological, system-functional methods is implemented. Descriptive and comparative methods, method of typology, modeling are used. Also used is a method of content analysis for the study of gender content of modern gender-stamped journals. It was he who allowed quantitatively to identify and explore the features of the gender concept in the pages of periodicals for women and men. A combination of historical, structural-typological, system-functional methods is also implemented in the article. Descriptive and comparative methods, method of typology, modeling are used. A method of content analysis for the study of gender content of modern gender-labeled journals is also used. It allowed to identify and explore the features of the gender concept quantitatively in the periodicals for women and men. The conceptual perception and interpretation of the gender concept «woman», which is highlighted in the modern gender-labeled press in Ukraine, requires the elaboration of the polyfunctionality of gender interpretations, the comprehension of the metaphorical perception of this image and its role and purpose in society. A gendered approach to researching the gender content of contemporary periodicals for women and men. Conceptual analysis of contemporary gender-stamped publications within the gender conceptual sphere allows to identify and correlate the meta-gender and gender concepts that appear in society.
3

Butyrina, Maria, and Valentina Ryvlina. MEDIATIZATION OF ART: VIRTUAL MUSEUM AS MASS MEDIA. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.49.11075.

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The research is devoted to the study of the phenomenon of mediatization of art on the example of virtual museums. Main objective of the study is to give communication characteristics of the mediatized socio-cultural institutions. The subject of the research is forms, directions and communication features of virtual museums. Methodology. In the process of study, the method of communication analysis, which allowed to identify and characterize the main factors of the museum’s functioning as a communication system, was used. Among them, special emphasis is put on receptive and metalinguistic functions. Results / findings and conclusions. The need to be competitive in the information space determines the gradual transformation of socio-cultural institutions into mass media, which is reflected in the content and forms of dialogue with recipients. When cultural institutions begin to function as media, they take on the features of media structures that create a communication environment localized by the functions of communicators and audience expectations. Museums function in such a way that along with the real art space they form a virtual space, which puts the recipients into the reality of the exhibitions based on the principle of immersion. Mediaization of art on the example of virtual museum institutions allows us to talk about: expanding of the perceptual capabilities of the audience; improvement of the exposition function of mediatized museums with the help of Internet technologies; interactivity of museum expositions; providing broad contextual background knowledge necessary for a deep understanding of the content of works of art; the possibility to have a delayed viewing of works of art; absence of thematic, time and space restrictions; possibility of communication between visitors; a huge target audience. Significance. The study of the mediatized forms of communication between museums and visitors as well as the directions of their transformation into media are certainly of interest to the scientific field of “Social Communications”.
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Mazzetti Latini, C., PB Emanuelli, and CA Martínez Arco. Technology and death. Post-mortem survival in the age of social media. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, October 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2017-1215en.

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Shey Wiysonge, Charles, Lilian Dudley, and Jimmy Volmink. Do mass media interventions increase uptake of HIV testing? SUPPORT, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.30846/1703052.

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Low uptake of HIV testing is one of the main reasons why only one third of people who need antiretroviral medications are currently receiving treatment worldwide. Mass media are sometimes used to promote voluntary HIV counseling and testing and to sustain test seeking behavior. Mass media include television, radio, internet, newspapers, books, posters, and billboards.
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Costa, Dora, and Matthew Kahn. Death and the Media: Asymmetries in Infectious Disease Reporting During the Health Transition. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, April 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w21073.

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Robinson, John R. Mass Media Theory, Leveraging Relationships, and Reliable Strategic Communication Effects. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, March 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada482173.

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NARYKOVA, N. A., S. V. KHATAGOVA, and Yu R. PEREPELITSYNA. PEJORATIVE WORDS IN GERMAN MASS-MEDIA IN NOMINATIONS OF POLITICIANS. Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2077-1770-2021-14-1-3-57-68.

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One of the main functions of mass media is influence on public opinion. So emotionally-painted lexical means are widely used in mass media in relation to leading politicians who are the centre of political arena. They are exposed to the frequent criticism, a negative estimation. The present article is devoted to the consideration of pejorative lexicon which is applied in nominations for heads of states. An empirical material of research were electronic newspapers and editions: Der Spiegel, Die Zeit, Sueddeutsche Zeitung, Der Tagesspiegel, taz, Die Welt, Gegenblende. As the basic methods of research are the following: the componental analysis, the lexico-semantic analysis, the stylistic analysis. The result of research revealed, that in German mass media there is a significant amount of persons names pejorative colouring. They express censure, disrespect, sneer, hatred, antipathy, condemnation, mistrust and so on. There main word-formations for persons nominations are composition, a derivation with using of suffixes and subsuffixes, attributive word-combinations, metaphorically-metonymical way. The materials of the research work can be used in the course of learning German language, at the practical training in oral speech, and also in the course of lexicology, general and aspect lexicography.
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Blanco Castilla, E., M. Quesada, and L. Teruel Rodríguez. From Kyoto to Durban. Mass media editorial position about climate change. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, June 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2013-983en.

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Greenbaum, Steve G. NMR Studies of Mass Transport in New Conducting Media for Fuel Cells. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada502750.

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