University of Worcester Worcester Research and Publications
 
  USER PANEL:
  ABOUT THE COLLECTION:
  CONTACT DETAILS:

Gendering Worcester News

Mitra, Barbara ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4512-466X, Taylor, L., Milburn-Curtis, C. and McCarron, J. (2018) Gendering Worcester News. Journal of the Association for Journalism Education, 7 (1). pp. 29-38. ISSN 2050-3903

[thumbnail of Gendering Worcester News.pdf] Text
Gendering Worcester News.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (581kB) | Request a copy
[thumbnail of Gendering Worcester (2).pdf]
Preview
Text
Gendering Worcester (2).pdf - Published Version

Download (465kB) | Preview

Abstract

This research explores gender and gender stereotypes in a local newspaper, focusing on issues such as whose voice is accessed as a news source, as well as whether female and male journalists dominate soft news or hard news articles. Using the local newspaper, Worcester News, detailed content analysis was conducted for six months (Monday to Saturday for the same week each month). The analysis highlighted that gender biases continue in Worcester News and that this has implications for training journalists. Male journalists tended to write far more articles about Politics (Political articles were written by 89% of male journalists compared with 11% of female journalists). Similarly, male journalists were more likely to write about Crime and Business (73% of these articles were written by male journalists compared with 27% of female journalists). Female journalists also wrote more about Family issues (36% male journalists compared with 64% of female journalists) and Leisure (34% male journalists compared with 66% female journalists).
These differences reinforce hard news/soft news gendered perceptions, as well as providing the readership with role models that tend to strengthen gender stereotypes, such as women being discouraged from engaging in politics and the public sphere. The sole authoritative voices used also tended to be male (49% were male compared with 14% that were solely female). Female sources were often placed alongside a male (this constituted 29% in Worcester News) – and although these figures tended to be better than the findings from Cochrane (2011), it is suggested that such gender disparities are continuing to reinforce hegemonic masculinity as the dominant norm for journalists and the news they produce.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Discrete Keywords: gender, gender stereotypes, news, newspapers, hard news, soft news, journalism
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
Divisions: College of Arts, Humanities and Education > School of Humanities
Related URLs:
Depositing User: Barbara Mitra
Date Deposited: 14 Sep 2018 09:40
Last Modified: 07 Apr 2022 04:00
URI: https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/id/eprint/7036

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item
 
     
Worcester Research and Publications is powered by EPrints 3 which is developed by the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton. More information and software credits.