The Egyptian Press and Coverage of Local and International Events
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2010
Summary
The Egyptian press has a large readership and potential influence on public opinion in Egypt and the Arab world. The Egyptian Press and Coverage of Local and International Events analyzes this understudied area. Written in Egypt, the book is formed of five chapters and analyzes in qualitative and quantitative methods close to 300 newspaper and magazine articles. It studies the Egyptian press and investigates the challenges it faces to be compatible with that in the west, and evaluates the renowned book Four Theories of the press and whether today's Egyptian press can fit in one of those theories. It also looks at the concepts of framing and discourse analysis adopted later. The author examines how the Egyptian press framed the Sudanese refugees' riot in Cairo in December 2005 by the top thirteen Egyptian national, independent, and party newspapers. It found that independent and party newspapers enjoy more freedom than national ones in criticizing government and the way police tackled the protest. However, independent newspapers were more vigorous in their criticism than party ones. The author observes that the weekly magazines tended to frame their coverage in a somewhat anti-government slant, accusing authorities and ferry owners of failure and corruption. Finally, the book compares coverage of the Israeli War in Lebanon in July 2006 by Egypt's giant semi-official daily newspaper Al-Ahram with that by two prominent, non-Egyptian pan-Arab dailies Al-Hayat and Asharq Al-Awsat. He finds that while Al-Hayat and Asharq Al-Awsat, which are owned by Saudi businessmen, portrayed Hizbullah in an unfavorable manner, Al-Ahram was somewhat favorable in its coverage of the Lebanese resistance group.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2010
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7391-2431-4
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7391-4520-3
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 163
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Preface No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- 1.1: National Newspapers No access
- 1.2: Party Newspapers No access
- 1.3: Independent Newspapers No access
- Notes No access
- 2.1: Four Theories of the Press No access
- 2.2: News Framing No access
- 2.3: Discourse Analysis No access
- Notes No access
- 3.1: Introduction No access
- 3.2: Why this Study? No access
- 3.3: The Newspapers No access
- 3.4: Method No access
- 3.5: Frames No access
- 3.6: Finding No access
- 3.7: Conclusion No access
- Notes No access
- 4.1: Introduction No access
- 4.2: Significance of Study No access
- 4.3: The Magazines No access
- 4.4: Method No access
- 4.5: Frames No access
- 4.6: Results No access
- 4.7: Conclusion No access
- Notes No access
- 5.1: Introduction No access
- 5.2: The Newspaper No access
- 5.3: Method No access
- 5.4: Frames No access
- 5.4: Finding No access
- 5.6: Conclusion No access
- Notes No access
- 6.1: Introduction No access
- 6.2: U.S.-Egyptian Ties No access
- 6.3: Main Issues No access
- 6.4: Finding No access
- 6.5: Conclusion No access
- Notes No access
- 7.1: Introduction No access
- 7.2: The Speech No access
- 7.3: Method No access
- 7.4: Frames No access
- 7.5: Finding No access
- 7.6: Conclusion No access
- Notes No access
- Bibliography No access Pages 153 - 156
- Index No access Pages 157 - 162
- About the Author No access Pages 163 - 163





