semanticscholar.org

What's right (and wrong) about left media criticism? Herman and Chomsky's propaganda model | Semantic Scholar

@article{Goodwin1994WhatsR,
  title={What's right (and wrong) about left media criticism? Herman and Chomsky's propaganda model},
  author={Jeff Goodwin},
  journal={Sociological Forum},
  year={1994},
  volume={9},
  pages={101-111},
  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:143939984}
}

Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky recently conducted an interesting comparative analysis of the U.S. media's treatment of the case of Father Jerzy Popieluszko, a priest murdered in 1984 by the police in thenCommunist Poland, and the media's coverage of the murder of no less than 100 priests and religious activists in Latin America-including the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador in March 1980 and the murder of four North American religious workers in December 1980 by… 

22 Citations

The Legacy of Edward Herman

This article reflects on the legacy of the American media critic and political economist Edward Herman; his influence on the field of media scholarship, and on the author’s own work. Its notes that

The Case for a Dutch Propaganda Model

Media scholars in the Netherlands have largely ignored Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky’s propaganda model. Nonetheless, this article concludes that the model is germane to Dutch journalism and its

10 References

Manufacturing the news

Acknowledgments 1. News and Public Events Assembling a Crime Wave Creating Public Events Studying Newswork The Organization of This Book The Research Setting Purissima's Press Corps Methodology I:

CULTURE OF TERRORISM

Part I: The Scandals of 1986 The Challenge Cultural-Historical Context Problems of Clandestine Terrorism Limits of Scandal Culture of Terrorism Damage Control Perils of Diplomacy Reality that must be

The Media Monopoly

The best ebooks about Media Monopoly that you can get for free here by download this Media Monopoly and save to your desktop. This ebooks is under topic such as the new media monopoly paolo cirio