Title
U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Arab Americans Pre and Post9/11: Perceptions of Deviance and Deviant Groups in the News: Did Public,Used
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The findings of the study show that deviance does play some role in the news coverage of Arab Americans, but the role is not as strong as theory would predict. Contrary to the prediction by the theories of influence on mass media content by Shoemaker and Reese, the study found that an increase in the U.S. public?s perceived deviance of ArabAmericans was not correlated with increased stereotyping of them by eight major metro newspapers in the five years that followed the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The findings also provided only moderate support to the hypothesis that the more deviant the U.S. public perceives ArabAmericans the more coverage they will receive by the news media ? also an argument of the Shoemaker and Reese theory. The study also found that although there was an increase in coverage of ArabAmericans after the terrorist attacks of 9/11 as the Shoemaker and Reese theory predicted ? that increase declined in the following years. The findings also show that the majority of the coverage of ArabAmericans remained balanced in tone in the five years after 9/11.
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