The Media in the 1984 and 1988 Presidential Campaigns
By (Author) Guido H. Stempel
By (author) John W. Windhausen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Elections and referenda / suffrage
324.9730927
Hardback
232
Presidential candidates have criticized the press since the days of Thomas Jefferson, with claims of media bias for one party or another being a recurring campaign complaint. In focusing on the presidential campaigns of 1984 and 1988, this study provides a comprehensive analysis of media bias in two particular elections as well as for presidential campaigns in general. Stempel and Windhauser have collected more data than in any previous study and they have included newspapers, network television news, and news magazines in their evaluation. Their thorough analysis of the content and slant of each itwm provides a clearcut picture of just what the media covered and how the coverage differed when an incumbent was not running. The study is based on news items collected from 23 sources in the three media, covering the Labour Day through Election Day period of both campaigns. Seventeen elite newspapers, including the "New York Times", Wall Street Journal," Washington Post," and "Chicago Tribune," had their election coverage analyzed, as did the three major television networks and the three general news magazines, "Time," "Newsweek," and "U.S. News and World Report." Each news item was classified by which candidate it primarily concerned, whether it was favourable, unfavourable, or neutral, and what major issues the story dealt with. The findings are presented in three separate chapters offering analysis of newspaper editorials in the two campaigns and the results of a telephone survey on public attitudes toward coverage. A final chapter provides a concluding look at the press, politicians, and the public. This comprehensive study should be a useful reference for courses in political science, journalism, and American history, and a valuable addition to public and academic libraries.
This book represents a serious effort to empirically treat the recurring question of media bias in presidential campaigns. . . . This is the most unique and comprehensive study of its type. However, the mere depth of the study, the bibliography, and the research designs utilized by the contributions make it an important reference work for scholars and students in the fields of journalism and communication arts.-Religious Studies Review
"This book represents a serious effort to empirically treat the recurring question of media bias in presidential campaigns. . . . This is the most unique and comprehensive study of its type. However, the mere depth of the study, the bibliography, and the research designs utilized by the contributions make it an important reference work for scholars and students in the fields of journalism and communication arts."-Religious Studies Review
GUIDO H. STEMPEL III is Director of the Bush Research Center and a Distinguished Professor of Journalism in the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University. He is co-author and co-editor of Research Methods in Mass Communication. He was the editor of Journalism Quarterly from 1972 to 1989 and the author of more than one hundred articles. JOHN W. WINDHAUSER is an Associate Professor of Journalism in the Manship School of Journalism at Louisiana State University. The former reporter and editor worked on newspapers in Indiana, Tennessee, and Colorado, and was editor of College Press Review. He has written articles that have appeared in the Newspaper Research Journal, Journalism Quarterly, and Mass Communications Review.