Framing and reframing the 1992 LA Riots: A study of minority issues framing by the Los Angeles Times and its readers

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26441/RC16.2-2017-A6

Keywords:

journalism, reporting, race minorities, audiences

Abstract

It is common for media messages to show the family since the crisis that this institution is experiencing. It is often conceived not as the place where the person is loved on his own, but as the "power struggles" between his members, especially between woman and man. With the documentary method - bibliographic study - of the conceptual analysis, this paper seeks to clarify some essential elements of the relationships within the family -in order to contribute to a better communication of the family reality- specifically those related to woman and man. From the systemic -non-analytical- methodical proposal of Leonardo Polo, it is proposed that there are three characteristics of this relationship -reciprocity, complementarity, co-responsibility- that have to be studied in their mutual internal connection to understand intrafamily dynamism. In this way it is possible to communicate effectively its reality.

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Author Biographies

  • Soo-Kwang Oh, Pepperdine University

    Ph.D. from the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. He is currently an Assistant Professor at Pepperdine University.

  • Justin Hudson, University of Maryland

    Graduated an M.A. in the education from the University of California-Berkeley, is a Ph.D. candidate at the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland

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Published

2017-09-20

Issue

Section

Papers

How to Cite

Oh, S.-K., & Hudson, J. (2017). Framing and reframing the 1992 LA Riots: A study of minority issues framing by the Los Angeles Times and its readers. Revista De Comunicación, 16(2), 123-146. https://doi.org/10.26441/RC16.2-2017-A6