Academic literature on the topic 'Wall newspapers'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wall newspapers"

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Lee, Wan-Soo, Min-Kyu Lee, Seok Kang, and Jae-Woong Yoo. "The Samsung–Apple patent war: Socio-cultural comparative study of news frames in a business conflict issue." International Communication Gazette 81, no. 1 (April 10, 2018): 46–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748048518767789.

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This study explored a comparative analysis of how the South Korean and United States media framed the Samsung–Apple patent lawsuit. The South Korean and U.S. media have a tendency to report Samsung–Apple patent disputes in a completely different angle. While framing in favor of Samsung was frequent in South Korea, neutral frames were dominant in the United States. The South Korean newspapers showed a stronger nationalism in favor of Samsung, whereas the U.S. newspapers portrayed the business conflict in the market logic. The South Korean and U.S. newspapers also showed differences in framing according to the ideological characteristics of the newspaper. In South Korea, the main conservative newspaper ( Chosun Ilbo) framed the issue in favor of Samsung and the largest liberal newspaper ( Hankyoreh) revealed a tendency to frame it in favor of Apple. However, in the United States, only the main business newspaper ( Wall Street Journal) favored Apple. This study contributes to news framing research in that socio-cultural divergences, framing pool (e.g., generic frames vs. issue-specific frames), and journalistic contexts considered systematically.
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Dyakieva, Baldzhya B., Olga I. Lepilkina, and Nina G. Ochirova. "Establishment of a Periodic Printing System in Polyethnic Regions in 1900-1930s (on the Material of the Press of Kalmykia and Stavropol region)." Proceedings of Southern Federal University. Philology 2020, no. 4 (December 25, 2020): 226–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.18522/1995-0640-2020-4-226-235.

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The formation of the system of periodicals in two similar and dissimilar polyethnic regions in the south of Russia – Kalmykia and Stavropol – developed according to the same scheme, but had significant nuances. The Stavropol press, aimed at the Russian majority in the region, appeared earlier (in 1850) and was typologically more diverse and numerous until the 1920s, while the publications created for the Kalmyks were for a long time isolated projects: The Russian-Kalmyk Calendar (1911-1918), a newspaper in the Kalmyk language «Oordin ziang» (1917-1918), leaflets and the first bilingual newspaper «Red Kalmyk» (1919-1920). A new stage in the development of journalism in the regions begins with the establishment of Soviet power after the end of the civil war. The work of the press is under the control of the ruling party, and the unification of the system of regional and local periodicals begins. Gradually, both in Kalmykia and in Stavropol, a harmonious system of periodicals was formed, lined up vertically and horizontally: regional / regional mass sociopolitical newspapers – regional / regional youth newspapers – regional / regional children’s newspapers – district / ulus socio-political newspapers – large circulation newspapers – wall newspapers. In addition to newspapers, instructor magazines for party and Soviet workers, literary and artistic publications of regional writers’ unions were published. The polyethnicity of the regions influenced the information policy of local periodicals and the structure of the press: in Kalmykia there were publications in the Kalmyk language, in Russian and bilingual, in Stavropol, along with publications in Russian, there were bilingual publications in two districts.
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NIKONOVA, EKATERINA A. "BALANCE OF OPINION IN NEWSPAPERS THROUGH EDITORIAL AND OP-ED GENRES." Cherepovets State University Bulletin 6, no. 105 (2021): 78–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.23859/1994-0637-2021-6-105-7.

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The article deals with the analysis of the balance of opinion in the newspaper, which is originally realized through editorial and op-ed genres. We analyzed 20 articles from “The Wall Street Journal” and “The New York Times” in the genres of editorial and op-ed about events in Afghanistan in August 2021, which were interpreted differently in mass media due to the role of the White House. The findings prove that in the context of new digital reality the op-ed has lost its original function of conveying alternative positions to the ones stated in the editorial; at the same time newspapers tend to advocate the positions shared by the political parties they have historically developed close relations with: “The Wall Street Journal” - with the Republican Party, “The New York Times” - the Democratic Party.
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Hadidi, Yaser, Ilham Taghiyev, and Saadat Ahmadova. "Linguistic Devices Used in Newspaper Headlines." Special Issue, no. 2 (December 2021): 5–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.5782/.kjhss.2021.5.21.

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Nowadays mass media plays a crucial role in people’s lives. Online newspapers constitute a part of media discourse, which makes for extremely important bodies of text for the purposes of research in discourse analysis. In news headlines, careful and sensitive use is made of linguistic devices in order to make the headlines unique and different, influence the readers, create trust for the newspaper, and, most importantly, invite and encourage the reader to proceed to the whole story and the main body of the report/news report. In this spirit, this study is a linguistic analysis of headlines in the political section of established online American newspapers. The data for this study comprises 50 headlines collected from 5 online newspapers revolving around the theme of Donald Trump. It aims to explore the linguistics structure of newspaper headlines in the sample articles from these 5 most widely read newspapers: The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, and Washington Post. In this qualitative-quantitative study, use is made of the model by Montgomery (2007) that takes account of a comprehensive picture that pays due respects to linguistic, semantic and discursive properties of headlines alongside each other in a complete package. The findings are mapped out in the form of figures and charts. The results of the frequency analysis showed that newspapers mostly used ‘full sentence’ and ‘ellipsis’ in their headlines. The qualitative analysis revealed that most of the semantic, linguistic and discursive strategies used in headlines are geared to the ‘tactical incompleteness strategy’, a helpful notion and a part of Montgomery’s model.
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Hadidi, Yaser, Ilham Taghiyev, and Saadat Ahmadova. "Linguistic Devices Used in Newspaper Headlines." Khazar Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 25, no. 2 (July 2022): 5–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.5782/2223-2621.2022.25.2.5.

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Nowadays mass media plays a crucial role in people’s lives. Online newspapers constitute a part of media discourse, which makes for extremely important bodies of text for the purposes of research in discourse analysis. In news headlines, careful and sensitive use is made of linguistic devices in order to make the headlines unique and different, influence the readers, create trust for the newspaper, and, most importantly, invite and encourage the reader to proceed to the whole story and the main body of the report/news report. In this spirit, this study is a linguistic analysis of headlines in the political section of established online American newspapers. The data for this study comprises 50 headlines collected from 5 online newspapers revolving around the theme of Donald Trump. It aims to explore the linguistics structure of newspaper headlines in the sample articles from these 5 most widely read newspapers: The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, and Washington Post. In this qualitative-quantitative study, use is made of the model by Montgomery (2007) that takes account of a comprehensive picture that pays due respects to linguistic, semantic and discursive properties of headlines alongside each other in a complete package. The findings are mapped out in the form of figures and charts. The results of the frequency analysis showed that newspapers mostly used ‘full sentence’ and ‘ellipsis’ in their headlines. The qualitative analysis revealed that most of the semantic, linguistic and discursive strategies used in headlines are geared to the ‘tactical incompleteness strategy’, a helpful notion and a part of Montgomery’s model.
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Rodriguez, Nathian Shae, and Mariana De Maio. "Straddling the Wall: Comparative Framing of Trump’s Border Wall in U.S. & Mexican Newspapers." Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Studies 8, no. 4 (August 25, 2021): 171. http://dx.doi.org/10.29333/ejecs/775.

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Donald Trump’s most notorious promise before and during his presidency was the construction of a border wall. The issues surrounding new construction of Donald Trump’s border wall (both physically and rhetorically) are complex and the outcomes are difficult to predict. The study examines how Trump’s border wall was framed in online newspaper publications of the international border cities of San Diego, California and Tijuana, Mexico, and in El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Specifically, the study employs a comparative framing analysis using the John Agnew’s (2008) theoretical lens of borders as equivocal spaces of dwelling that bring about both benefit and harm — the standard of a decent life. The analysis revealed the frames of: Mexico will pay for the wall; DACA as leverage; political contention; protest and dissention; environmental impact; immigration package; separation and divisiveness; safety and security; and economic consequences. A majority of the content published in the U.S. was produced locally, however, most of the content published in Mexico was from news agencies, except for the opinion pieces that were locally produced for outlets on both side of the border.
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Feldman, Lauren, P. Sol Hart, and Tijana Milosevic. "Polarizing news? Representations of threat and efficacy in leading US newspapers’ coverage of climate change." Public Understanding of Science 26, no. 4 (July 30, 2015): 481–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0963662515595348.

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This study examines non-editorial news coverage in leading US newspapers as a source of ideological differences on climate change. A quantitative content analysis compared how the threat of climate change and efficacy for actions to address it were represented in climate change coverage across The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and USA Today between 2006 and 2011. Results show that The Wall Street Journal was least likely to discuss the impacts of and threat posed by climate change and most likely to include negative efficacy information and use conflict and negative economic framing when discussing actions to address climate change. The inclusion of positive efficacy information was similar across newspapers. Also, across all newspapers, climate impacts and actions to address climate change were more likely to be discussed separately than together in the same article. Implications for public engagement and ideological polarization are discussed.
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Somerstein, Rachel. "Picturing the past: The Berlin Wall at 25." International Communication Gazette 79, no. 8 (May 18, 2017): 701–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748048517707388.

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Although the mass media is an important tool that audiences rely on to learn about the past, the relationship among journalism, history, and memory is still underdeveloped; visual collective memory, like visual studies in other subfields, has received even less attention than written and textual representations of collective memory. To address that gap, this article uses a qualitative content analysis to assess how 15 newspapers commemorated the 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall’s opening through photographs. Newspapers from countries that were capitalist and communist in 1989 are compared to identify the ways that different cultures ‘remember’ the same past. Five genres of images emerged: iconic photographs, memorials, metonymic and mythological portraits, metonymic relics, and images of resistance, though these genres were framed differently depending on a country’s political system in 1989. In comparing this cross-cultural collective memory, this study looks at what these visual commemorations reveal about cross-cultural anniversary practices, an area of memory studies that has received little attention.
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Golan, Guy J., and Josephine Lukito. "Newspaper editorial pages frame China similarly." Newspaper Research Journal 38, no. 2 (June 2017): 215–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532917716177.

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The current study examines the framing of China in the opinion section of two elite newspapers, The New York Times and Wall Street Journal. Although there is an expectation that editorials and op-eds present multiple frames and opinions, the results of a content analysis show that China is not framed differently between these two newspapers. Both papers largely emphasized the same issues and issue frames.
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Guzikova, V. V., and V. Е. Nesterova. "Newspaper headlines as a tool for linguistic modeling of police image." Philology at MGIMO 7, no. 2 (July 6, 2021): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2410-2423-2021-2-26-25-37.

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The article considers the issue of linguistic modeling of the image of the police in the newspa[1]per discourse, in newspaper headlines in particular. This article is relevant and determined by the need to study the representation of reality in the media discourse and its linguistic manifestation. In addition, the media have recently paid close attention to the coverage of the activities of social institutions, especially with regard to law enforcement agencies. The authors describe the characteristics of the mass media discourse as one of the tools for implementing public power, organizing the activities of political and social institutions, and forming an image. The paper considers the specific features and functions of the newspaper discourse, and also considers the newspaper headline, which acts as a pragmatic component of a newspaper article contributing to the creation of information and social mediation between addressees and addressers in order to exert a regulatory influence on public opinion. The article focuses on the structural, semantic and stylistic analysis of the newspaper headlines that represent information about law enforcement agencies’ activities in Russia and the United States. The authors divide the publications into neutral (“Arguments and Facts”, “USA Today”, “Wall Street Journal”), pro-government (“Newspaper. Ru”, “Rossiyskaya Gazeta” and “Moskovsky Komsomolets”, “Associated Press”) and opposition newspapers (“Novaya Gazeta”, “Kommersant”, “The New York Times”, “Washington Post”). In total, 60 newspaper headlines were analyzed for the period from September to December 2020. The results show that the texts of newspaper reports perform informative and pragmatic functions, and the newspaper headline is the key to understanding the author’s position and intentions. Lexical, grammatical, and stylistic differences in the headlines of Russian and American newspapers devoted to the activities of law enforcement agencies were identified, as well as language techniques for exerting speech influence on the reader and linguistic modeling of the police image.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wall newspapers"

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Hiller, Katlin M. "The Wall Still Stands... Or Does It? Collective Memory of the Berlin Wall as Represented in American and German Newspapers." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1533211779787264.

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Abernathy, T. Duncan. "Parallel walls for the fourth estate: a building for a newspaper in Roanoke, Virginia." Thesis, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53163.

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As man arrived, so he will leave: in solitude. In between, through necessity or desire, he associates with others. Yet he resides as he is, alone with his soul. Inseparable yet distinct. He can neglect the soul, allow it to become obscured through the noise of others. It will wither, but not die. He can nourish the soul; grant it all his attention and obscure the man. The man will wither and die. Man and soul can coexist and flourish through the association of mankind. Architecture should celebrate this coexistence.
Master of Architecture
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Xing, Luo Linda. "(Non-)Human Contributions to Climate Change : As Represented by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Nation." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för ekonomisk historia och internationella relationer, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-188056.

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Climate change has become one of the most prominent topics in the media as a reflection of today’s political climate. But despite the multiple reports detailing consequences and causes, people still remain split on whether or not human beings contribute to climate change. The United States has some of the most notable media platforms and public perception relies heavily on how these news outlets choose to frame climate change. Therefore, this essay will investigate the extent to which The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Nation acknowledge the extent to which human beings contribute to climate change. The investigation will be conducted through the theory of the propaganda model which will be linked to two key approaches: newspaper ideology and critiques of capitalism. Based on these aspects, the research essay shows how newspaper ideology influences the way newspapers acknowledge or disregard climate change as a human contribution.
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Parker, Simon. "Unrhymed poetry: the influence of the New York popular newspaper on Walt Whitman's 1855 'Leaves of grass'." Thesis, Lancaster University, 1997. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.484081.

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Arvidsson, Clara, and Amanda Ekblad. ""Det är en väldig kraft i henne. Även nu när hon har gått bort" : En kvalitativ studie om mordet på Kim Wall i Aftonbladet." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för medier och journalistik (MJ), 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-79806.

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The purpose of our study was to examine how the newspaper Aftonbladet reported about the murder of Kim Wall. The questions in focus were; how are Kim Wall and Peter Madsen being represented in Aftonbladet? And how are the representation of them changing throughout time? In the study we have made a discourse analysis where eleven news articles were analysed. The result is presented in themes of discourses constructed of Wall and Madsen in Aftonbladet. Our results showed that Kim Wall was represented as a helpless woman, a brave journalist and an invisible individual. Peter Madsen was represented as a talented inventor, a cold-hearted monster and a crazy man. The results also showed that the tabloid journalism Aftonbladet had about the murder of Kim Wall were in a sensational and detailed way.
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Hall, Richard, and Sara Tellin. "Alla vägar bär till det digitala Rom : En kvalitativ studie om svensk länspress väg in i det digitala samhället." Thesis, Karlstads universitet, Avdelningen för medie- och kommunikationsvetenskap, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-30943.

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Syftet med den här uppsatsen är att undersöka svensk länspress väg in i det digitala samhället, vilka medvetna val som görs i samband med förändringen, samt vilka fördelar och nackdelar den digitala utvecklingen medfört. Arbetet vill dessutom få ett tydligt svar på vilken den största utmaningen är med att digitalisera sin verksamhet. Uppsatsen har för avsikt att genom de ekonomiska och teknologiska aspekterna söka svar på dessa frågor, och tar därmed avstånd ifrån alla politiska inblandningar. För att undersöka detta har två länstidningar granskats; Nya Wermlandstidningen och Värmlands Folkblad, och metoden som användes var kvalitativ forskningsintervju, genom så kallade halvstrukturerade intervjuer. Fyra personer på vardera tidning med hög relevans för studiens syfte intervjuades. De teroetiska områden som den här uppsatsen bygger på är teorier kring digitalisering, konvergens, förflyttat fokus och makt inom medievärlden, samt begreppet gratismentalitet som har en återkommande position genom hela arbetet. Ett annat begrepp som tas upp och diskuteras är betalvägg, det vill säga en sorts betallösning för tidningar på internet. Teoriavsnittet sammanfattas genom en egengjord modell, kallad Maktfördelningsmodellen, som ger en indikation på de effekter som digitaliseringen, konvergensen och fokusförflyttningen medfört. Utifrån de kvalitativa intervjuerna framkom tydliga mönster mellan de två tidningarna, där de båda hade närmast identiska strategier för att klara av övergången till det digitala; ett flertal digitala plattformar diskuterades såsom webbtidning, sociala medier och mobila enheter. Den enda skillnaden mellan de granskade tidningarna är att NWT sedan augusti 2013 infört en typ av betalmodell, kallad plus-tjänst, medan VF än så länge inte valt att använda sig av någon betallösning, och i stället håller allt sitt material öppet. Den tydligaste slutsatsen som kunde dras, och som framgick från resultatrapporteringen, är att tidningsbranschens största utmaning just nu, både på regional och rikstäckande nivå, är problematiken kring att kunna ta betalt för sina produkter på internet, vilket också var uppsatsens hypotes.
The function of this essay is to analyze the Swedish provincial press’ transition into the digital world, illuminate the choices made, together with the benefits and disadvantages that the digital transformation brings. This paper also intends to pinpoint the greatest challenge of bringing one’s business into the digital space. To find these answers, this essay will take the economic and technological approach and ignore all political aspects. To examine this, two newspapers have been studied; Nya Wermlandstidningen and Värmlands Folkblad, by using the “qualitative research interview” as leading method, more specifically using semi-structured interviews. In both companies four persons with high relevance were interviewed. The theoretical areas that this essay is based upon are theories involving digitalization, convergence and displaced focus in the media industry, together with the concept of cost-free mentality. Another concept that is discussed is the pay wall, meaning a way of payment for webzines. The theory chapter is summed up by the writer’s self-made model called “The Power Distribution Model”, which indicates the effects of digitalization, convergence and the displaced focus in the media industry. Results of the interviews showed obvious patterns between the two newspapers, showing nearly identical strategies to make their way into the digital world, where several digital platforms where discussed, such as webzines, social medias and mobile platforms. The only difference between the two is that NWT is using a kind of pay wall called “plus”, meanwhile VF still is publishing all their online news for free. The most obvious conclusion, which is also found in the reported result, is that the newspaper industry’s biggest challenge right now, both in local and national papers, is the issue of being able to make a profit of the news in their webzines, which is also the hypothesis of the essay.
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Robertson, Benjamin Nicholas. "An industry in transformation : a master's report on news media economics." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3329.

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The focus of this report was the modern news media and how the industry has tried to adapt in a world where most news can be gathered with a few keystrokes for free. The report is segmented into four parts and investigates both how and what kind of news is consumed. The first part of the report focuses on the different types of news aggregators and how they affect the revenue of news sites. Pay-walls are also discussed, using The New York Times’ recent decision to charge for access to their web site as a starting point. Evidence shows that besides one glaring exception (The Wall Street Journal, which is examined as an aside) the attempts to charge customers for content that was once free have largely been fruitless. The second part investigates mobile-based applications (also known as “apps”) and their economic strengths and weaknesses; topics ranging from companies’ initial successes to the ease of piracy are examined. The third part examines the meteoric, although at times numerically misleading, rise of Twitter and its potential use as a news gathering and consuming source as well as its massive potential revenue streams. The fourth part examines what types of news are currently the most consumed, and dissects the profitability (and the attributes that lead to their popularity) of four genres: lifestyle, entertainment, business, and sports. The piece also looks at the potential of community-based, hyper-localized journalism, a venture that many claim profitable yet has failed to produce concrete results. Graphs are used as supplementary material for parts one and three. Taken as a whole, the report concludes that while there may be no sure-fire winner in the news media industry, the industry has finally shaken off the complacency that lead to hundreds of thousands of journalism jobs being lost and finally started to evolve.
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Nicol, Olivia. "Dynamics of Attribution of Responsibility for the Financial Crisis." Thesis, 2016. https://doi.org/10.7916/D8N016Q6.

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Many recent books and articles have aimed to account for the recent financial crisis. They have exposed the facts, identified the causes, and assigned responsibility. They have proposed solutions to prevent a similar crisis to happen in the future. The debate is still ongoing, revealing a process of History in the making. My dissertation builds on this debate, but it does not contribute to it. I do not try to understand who is responsible for this crisis. I instead try to grasp how responsibility for this crisis was constructed. I explore the production of - and response to - a discourse of accusation. To study accusation discourses, I conducted a media analysis of three main national newspapers: The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today. I show how a blame game dominated by Democrats participated in the crystallization on Wall Street’s responsibility. To study responses to accusation discourses, I conducted thirty-three interviews in three Wall Street banks from Fall 2008 to Summer 2010. I show that bankers became increasingly defensive over time, while never accepting any personal responsibility for the crisis. Similarly, they reject the label of the “greedy banker.” Overall I argue that the complexity of modern social arrangement loosens the intrinsic connection between responsibility and accountability.
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Books on the topic "Wall newspapers"

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Ken, Wells, ed. Floating off the page: The best stories from the Wall Street journal's "Middle column". New York: Wall Street Journal, 2002.

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Panozo, Vitaliano Torrico. El pasquín en la independencia del Alto Perú. Puebla, Pue: Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, 1997.

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Ken, Wells, ed. Floating off the page: The best stories from the Wall Street journal's "Middle column". New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003.

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Wurman, Richard Saul. The Wall Street journal guide to understanding money & markets: Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, futures, money. New York, NY: Access Press, 1990.

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Menahem, Friedman, Doron Ganyah, Muzeʼon Erets-Yiśraʼel (Tel Aviv, Israel), and Yad Yitsḥaḳ Ben-Tsevi, eds. Pashḳṿilim: Modaʻot ḳir u-kherazot pulmus ba-reḥov ha-ḥaredi. Tel-Aviv: Muzeʼon Erets-Iśraʼel, 2005.

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Malveaux, Julianne. Wall Street, Main Street, and the side street: A mad economist takes a stroll. Los Angeles: Pines One Publications, 1999.

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Fast, Jonathan. Newsies: A novel. New York, N.Y: Disney Press, 1992.

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The paper wall: Newspapers and propaganda in Ireland 1919-1921. Cork: Collins Press, 2008.

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O'Shea, James. Deal from Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers. PublicAffairs, 2012.

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O'Shea, James. Deal from Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers. PublicAffairs, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wall newspapers"

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Allani, Samira, and Silvia Molina-Plaza. "Comparing the Portrayal of the Fall of the Berlin Wall in Two Spanish Newspapers: A Multimodal Analysis." In Language of the Revolution, 357–82. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-37178-3_17.

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Matthews, John O. "Accelerating Change, 1980-1992." In Struggle and Survival on Wall Street, 9–23. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195050639.003.0002.

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Abstract In the 1980s, the pace of change in the securities industry accelerated. Securities markets throughout the world became more closely linked. Economic disturbances were more rapidly transmitted from one national economy to another, and securities markets became more volatile. Investors looked outside their own countries for the best investment alternatives as communications and transactions costs fell. New financial theories provided the basis for new financial products, allowing investors to better structure and manage the risk of the portfolios they held. With their large portfolios and sophisticated analytical capabilities, institutions were better able than individuals were to deal with the changing environment. Individuals sensibly responded to these changes by switching from individual stock ownership to mutual fund ownership. For broker-dealers, the 1980s were characterized by years of extremely high profits, high salaries, and a great deal of publicity and notoriety. Newspapers were filled with stories of young investment bankers earning hundreds of thousands to even millions of dollars a year. The king of the hill in compensation was Drexel Burnham Lambert’s Michael Milken with his on-paper compensation of $550 million in 1987. Major movies like Wall Street, Working Girl, and Bonfire of the Vanities took the audience into the offices and trading rooms of fictitious Wall Street firms.
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Knobel, Beth. "Bigger Means Better." In The Watchdog Still Barks. Fordham University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823279333.003.0002.

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This chapter presents the results of the study of three large national newspapers with high circulation and big reputations for excellence. They are the New York Times (NYT or Times), the Washington Post (Post or WaPo), and the Wall Street Journal (WSJ or Journal). One might expect these high-achieving, well-funded news organizations to be the largest producers of watchdog journalism. This chapter considers that to be true, although not quite as much as one might think. Although the large papers were the highest producers of deep accountability reporting in the study group overall, they were surprisingly low producers during the early study years. And although their reputations were always high, a look back with hindsight shows that even the largest, strongest newspapers faced challenges in producing a steady stream of watchdog reporting during the time covered by this research.
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Sadiki, Larbi, and Layla Saleh. "Dissent of the Mind." In Revolution and Democracy in Tunisia, 130–87. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192863997.003.0004.

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Abstract This chapter zeroes in on student activism in the 1960s–1980s. It contextualizes these struggles, linking them to social, political, and intellectual dynamics. The analysis ascribes the brand of dissent spreading across university campuses to a capacity for translating heightened political awareness into sustained, polyphonous dissent. It links social acting and en-acting of protest to pluralist “ideologies,” social imaginaries, and speech acts. The evidence from interviews, newspapers, and other Tunisian publications maps out the practical dimensions of student protests. It also reveals their moral and normative content, given the focus on freedom, social justice, and rejection of authoritarian oppression. The chapter underscores the emancipatory trajectory followed by anti-regime protests across university campuses. Agency, affect, and cognition intermingle in these struggles. The chapter provides a unique insight into the formulation of democratic identities through a “learning loop.” It displays strategies of dissent such as hand-written wall newspapers, free spaces, and discussion circles.
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Ray, Robert B. "Clocks." In The ABCs of Classic Hollywood, 155–56. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195322910.003.0055.

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Abstract To what extent can a movie withhold information without confusing its viewers? Although Glenn Todd has demonstrated that the events in Hammett’s novel take place over five days (6–10 December 1928), Huston’s film confines the same action to four, with the conclusion in Spade’s office occurring at dawn on the fourth day. Since the movie must compress almost 72 hours of story time into 100 minutes, it relies on continual ellipses, whose exact durations often remain uncertain. The movie’s temporal demarcations become increasingly ghostly, the result of a calculated untethering of events from normal routine: Spade eats no meals, his newspapers have no dates, and the camera keeps his wall calendar just out of legible range.
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Greer, Colleen R., and Sally J. McMillan. "Articulations of Care." In Advances in Healthcare Information Systems and Administration, 1–32. IGI Global, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/979-8-3693-0015-2.ch001.

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This chapter explores cultural interpretations of care by examining five years (2018-2022) of content published in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. Over the last five years, as the United States faced COVID-19, people sought guidance regarding the pandemic itself as well as government decisions and socio-economic impacts by reading articles and letters published in these papers. The research looks at news coverage on the concept of care two years prior to the outbreak of COVID-19, during the height of the pandemic, and two years post-pandemic, and the authors analyze how these newspapers framed care across that time period. Through this content analysis, they identified four themes: breakdowns and breakthroughs, currency concerns, compassionate care, and heroes and villains. An exploration of these themes highlights when care is discussed by these news outlets and how, when analyses of particular forms of care are set aside, and how the news media serves as a central player in structuring understandings of care.
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Alpatov, Sergey. "Motives and Images of Folk Laughter Cultures as the Commonplaces of the Soviet Carnival of 1920–1930." In Laughter and Humor in the Slavic and Jewish Cultural Traditions, 223–48. Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences; Sefer, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2658-3356.2021.14.

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The article is devoted to the study of the problem of continuity between images, motives, poetic clichés of Russian as well as Jewish folk cultures and components of the laughter discourse of the Soviet era. Genre patterns (procession, round dance, game, street song, everyday wit), chronotope (Pesach / Easter / May day), archetype (a dying and resurrecting hero), ethnical and social stereotypes (“aliens”), ritual objects (carnival carriage; matzo vs Easter baking), grotesque rhymes (“matzo – lamza-dritsa”) are analyzed on the basis of the popular city song “Tram No. 9”, ditties, memoirs, satirical wall newspapers. Those elements of the traditional laughter culture of the Slavs and Jews had been actively interacted in the urban environment at the turn of the 19th–20th centuries, was exploited by the Soviet carnivals of the 1920s–1930s, and remained in Russian folklore of the second half of the 20th century. The study demonstrates that the scriptwriters and actors of the Soviet carnivals borrowed some of the brightest and at the same time common elements of folk laughter culture, which formed extremely labile semantic ties outside the traditional calendar and everyday contexts changing their content in agreement with the political situation. At the same time, the basic techniques and bottom semantics of the folk comic remain unchanged.
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Amenta, Edwin, and Neal Caren. "Lopsided Politics, Unbalanced Media, and US Movements Today." In Rough Draft of History, 222–48. Princeton University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691232782.003.0007.

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This chapter moves into the twenty-first century, when politics has become increasingly nationalized, while political parties have become asymmetrically polarized and different in kind. At the same time, the old news media regime was overthrown, with the rise of the internet and social media, the emergence of a powerful right-wing media system, 24-hour news, and the demise of many local newspapers. These transformations have boosted rightwing movement actors' bids for attention and policy change at the expense of those on the left. Nevertheless, national news organizations still do the bulk of newsgathering, have become even more important relative to their regional and local counterparts, and retain great influence over political debates. Movement coverage remains dominated by larger organizations, with changes in the standing of movements influenced by the decline of organized labor and the ascendance of movements that took off in the second half of the twentieth century. The news coverage of movements still responds to partisan regimes and policy change, though for left movements such change has been harder to come by. The chapter demonstrates how some of these transformations played out in the news coverage of the Occupy Wall Street and Tea Party movements, each with historical forerunners.
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Jäger, Siegfried. "Political Discourse: The Language of Right and Left in Germany." In The German Language and the Real World, 233–58. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198240549.003.0010.

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Abstract In this chapter I shall analyse the political discourse of the right and of the left in Germany. Elements of these forms of political language may also be found in ‘independent’ newspapers and in the rhetorics of members or sympathizers of several political parties of the centre. However, I shall deal in particular with contemporary texts and talk of the right and, with some reservations, of the left. I say ‘with reservations’ because there is no (strong) movement of the left in Germany today. Public discourse in contemporary Germany is predominantly coloured by conservative and right-wing ideologies and ideas, especially as regards everyday thinking and debate. Leftist ideas and ideologies survive only in the niches of little groups and circles, and relics of them can be found in a small number of journals and pamphlets. Thus it is a reflection of the political landscape of contemporary Germany if the analysis of right-wing political discourse dominates the following discussion. However, there is also some justification for this in the fact that right-wing thinking and debate in the new larger Germany can be seen as a danger for the democratic development of society in this country, and I think that it is also necessary for linguists such as myself to see their own political responsibility, especially in a country in which large sections of the population and many politicians today tend to deny its past political history and to suppress its responsibility for the Holocaust and the ‘Third Reich’ and other crimes. Furthermore, after the ‘fall of the Wall’, feelings of national ism and chauvinism are growing again, and new right-wing political groups are emerging, while the whole political map is drifting towards the right.
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Kafka, Franz. "The Huntsman Gracchus." In A Hunger Artist and Other Stories, edited by Joyce Crick and Ritchie Robertson. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199600922.003.0008.

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Two boys were sitting on the wall of the quay, playing at dice. A man was reading a newspaper on the steps of a monument in the shade of the sabre-swinging hero.* A girl was filling her wooden tub with water at...
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Conference papers on the topic "Wall newspapers"

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Dupin, Andrey. "Formation and Development of the Mass Media of Evenkia and Taimyr in 1930–1940s." In Irkutsk Historical and Economic Yearbook 2021. Baikal State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/978-5-7253-3040-3.21.

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This article examines the process of creation and development of mass media in the Evenkia and Taimyr national districts in the first half of the XX century. In the 1930s the foundations of radio broadcasting and periodicals are being laid. This process was complicated by a shortage of equipment and a shortage of employees, but despite this, by the end of the decade, many wall newspapers were published in the districts, numbers of district and regional publications were printed, and the radio network was expanding. Already at this time, a number of newspapers began to publish material in the national languages of the indigenous peoples. During the war years, there was no particular development of the media, however, in the post-war period, due to the improvement in the supply of districts, the development of radio broadcasting took place.
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Ogechukwu Offor, Ngozika. "La question de l’intégrité académique dans l’enseignement supérieur au Nigeria : une perspective phénoménologique." In 2ème Colloque International de Recherche et Action sur l’Intégrité Académique. « Les nouvelles frontières de l’intégrité ». IRAFPA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56240/cmb9917.

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Our study examines the root cause of this prevalent phenomenon in the Nigerian tertiary education system by analysing its peculiarities. The study is based on the inference that the issue of scientific plagiarism in Nigeria is more of a social phenomenon than an institutional problem. We introduce existing works as well trusted Nigerian newspapers articles. The findings of the research shows that societal perception has brought about the misconception that the term plagiarism is synonymous with imitation. It also reveals that while some act of plagiarism may be unintentional, deliberate plagiarism is perpetrated with impunity even within the walls of tertiary institutions. This study proposes a re-orientation of this general perception of the concept of plagiarism. This way, a better road map is set for the purging of the Nigerian tertiary education thereby creating an enabling environment for a skills-developing education system instead of being just a domain for the recycle of mediocrity.
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Maranelli, Francesco. "Engineering Melbourne’s “Great Structural- Functional Idea”: Aspects of the Victorian Post-war “Rapprôchement” between Architecture and Engineering." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a3998puxe9.

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In 1963, Robin Boyd wrote about a post-war “rapprôchement” between the disciplines of structural engineering and architecture. Etymologically, the term suggests the movement of two entities that draw closer to each other, either in an unprecedented fashion or resuming a suspended interaction. World War II and the “anxieties and stimulations” of the post-war period, to use Boyd’s expression, accelerated the process of overcoming longstanding educational and professional disciplinary barriers. They were the driving forces behind what he denominated the “great structural-functional idea” of the 1950s. Architecture schools embraced modernist/functionalist ideals, producing graduates with considerable technical knowledge - true “romantic engineers.” The global post-war fascination with unconventional structures played its part. Occasionally, Antoine Picon argues, architecture’s “symbolic and aesthetic discourses” walk a “strictly technical path.” Under the banner of Le Corbusier’s Esthétique de l’Ingénieur, architecture and engineering converged. New technologies made collaborations with engineers habitual. According to Andrew Saint, however, partnerships were rarely affairs of equals since “architectural jobs came to architects first.” The diversification and growing number of engineers also transformed them into a labour force, Picon suggests, affecting their prestige and, possibly, their historiographical fortune. Scholarship on post-war Melbourne architecture has generally privileged the architect as the protagonist in the creation of innovative structures, only occasionally acknowledging consultants. This does not reflect the concerted nature of design commissions and frequent evanescence of disciplinary boundaries. This paper aims to highlight the major playing grounds for this alignment within design professions. It also hints at the complex relationship between the contributions of Victorian engineers and their recognition by post-war newspapers and architectural journals, opening the analysis of Melbourne’s post-war architecture to the discourse of professional representation and arguing the importance of “unbiased” histories of the built environment.
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