Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media
This thesis examines the portrayal of Aboriginal Peoples in two Saskatchewan daily newspapers. This research is based on the question: "How is the notion of Aboriginal Peoples socially constructed in the print media?" Previous research indicates that media portrayals of minority groups are...
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University of Saskatchewan
2002
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ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-06202008-130404 2023-05-15T16:55:09+02:00 Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media Maslin, Crystal Lynn Li, Peter S. Shepard, Bruce Schissel, Bernard Wotherspoon, Terry 2002 http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-06202008-130404 en_US eng University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-06202008-130404 TC-SSU-06202008130404 keyword searching Inuit Metis Indian text Thesis 2002 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:52:25Z This thesis examines the portrayal of Aboriginal Peoples in two Saskatchewan daily newspapers. This research is based on the question: "How is the notion of Aboriginal Peoples socially constructed in the print media?" Previous research indicates that media portrayals of minority groups are often partial and stereotypical. Such portrayals are partly responsible for linking the unacceptable behavior of minority groups to phenotypic traits, and thereby contributing to the social significance of "race." Discourse analysis is used to analyze 437 newspaper articles that were collected using a full-text keyword search of the EBSCO Host database, which indexes articles from the Leader Post and the Star Phoenix. In general, the results reveal that Aboriginal peoples are regularly portrayed as problematic; either as having problems themselves, or as causing problems for non-Aboriginal peoples. The results support the view that race is socially constructed and demonstrate that "race," through media discourse, can become a socially acceptable explanation for social problems. Thesis inuit University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Indian |
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University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK |
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ftusaskatchewan |
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English |
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keyword searching Inuit Metis Indian |
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keyword searching Inuit Metis Indian Maslin, Crystal Lynn Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
topic_facet |
keyword searching Inuit Metis Indian |
description |
This thesis examines the portrayal of Aboriginal Peoples in two Saskatchewan daily newspapers. This research is based on the question: "How is the notion of Aboriginal Peoples socially constructed in the print media?" Previous research indicates that media portrayals of minority groups are often partial and stereotypical. Such portrayals are partly responsible for linking the unacceptable behavior of minority groups to phenotypic traits, and thereby contributing to the social significance of "race." Discourse analysis is used to analyze 437 newspaper articles that were collected using a full-text keyword search of the EBSCO Host database, which indexes articles from the Leader Post and the Star Phoenix. In general, the results reveal that Aboriginal peoples are regularly portrayed as problematic; either as having problems themselves, or as causing problems for non-Aboriginal peoples. The results support the view that race is socially constructed and demonstrate that "race," through media discourse, can become a socially acceptable explanation for social problems. |
author2 |
Li, Peter S. Shepard, Bruce Schissel, Bernard Wotherspoon, Terry |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Maslin, Crystal Lynn |
author_facet |
Maslin, Crystal Lynn |
author_sort |
Maslin, Crystal Lynn |
title |
Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
title_short |
Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
title_full |
Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
title_fullStr |
Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
title_full_unstemmed |
Social construction of aboriginal peoples in the Saskatchewan print media |
title_sort |
social construction of aboriginal peoples in the saskatchewan print media |
publisher |
University of Saskatchewan |
publishDate |
2002 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-06202008-130404 |
geographic |
Indian |
geographic_facet |
Indian |
genre |
inuit |
genre_facet |
inuit |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-06202008-130404 TC-SSU-06202008130404 |
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1766046138443497472 |