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Original Articles

The South African broadcasting corporation's coverage of the 1987 and 1989 elections: The matter of visual bias

Pages 153-179 | Accepted 01 Oct 1995, Published online: 18 May 2009

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Read on this site (6)

Sali Bouba Oumarou. (2023) Online Visual Framing of Conflict Mediation in Africa. Communicatio 49:1, pages 42-64.
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Stephen Banning & Renita Coleman. (2009) Louder than Words: A Content Analysis of Presidential Candidates' Televised Nonverbal Communication. Visual Communication Quarterly 16:1, pages 4-17.
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C.A. Tuggle, Suzanne Huffman & Dana Scott Rosengard. (2007) Reporting Live From the Scene: Enough to Attract the 18–24 Audience?. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 51:1, pages 58-72.
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JamesJ. Floyd & StevenM. Clements. (2005) The Vital Importance of Critical Listening: An Extended Example. International Journal of Listening 19:1, pages 39-47.
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Brooke Barnett & Maria Elizabeth Grabe. (2000) The impact of slow motion video on viewer evaluations of television news stories. Visual Communication Quarterly 7:3, pages 4-7.
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Articles from other publishers (12)

Sada Reed & Ali Forbes. (2023) Hero Shots: The Hero Myth as a Visual Frame in American Television Coverage of Lance Armstrong. Electronic News.
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Jürgen Maier, Isabella Glogger, Lukas P Otto & Jennifer Bast. (2021) Is there a visual bias in televised debates? Evidence from Germany, 2002–2017. Visual Communication 22:2, pages 221-242.
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Patrick A. Stewart, Austin D. Eubanks, Nicholas Hersom & Cooper A. Hearn. (2020) Visual Priming and Framing During the 2020 Democratic Presidential Debates: Electoral Status Predicts Favorable Camera Treatment. The International Journal of Press/Politics 26:1, pages 256-276.
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Bernadine JonesBernadine Jones. 2021. Elections and TV News in South Africa. Elections and TV News in South Africa 3 27 .
Ben Wasike. (2017) Jocks versus jockettes: An analysis of the visual portrayal of male and female cover models on sports magazines. Journalism 21:10, pages 1432-1449.
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Brian J. Bowe, Joe Gosen & Shahira Fahmy. (2019) Personal Choice or Political Provocation: Examining the Visual Framing and Stereotyping of the Burkini Debate . Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 96:4, pages 1076-1098.
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Patrick A. Stewart, Austin D. Eubanks & Jason Miller. (2019) Visual priming and framing of the 2016 GOP and Democratic Party presidential primary debates. Politics and the Life Sciences 38:1, pages 14-31.
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Patrick A. Stewart, Austin D. Eubanks, Reagan G. Dye, Scott Eidelman & Robert H. Wicks. (2017) Visual Presentation Style 2: Influences on Perceptions of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton Based on Visual Presentation Style During the Third 2016 Presidential Debate. American Behavioral Scientist 61:5, pages 545-557.
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Ian Muehlenhaus. (2011) Genealogy That Counts: Using Content Analysis to Explore the Evolution of Persuasive Cartography. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 46:1, pages 28-40.
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Erik P. Bucy & Maria Elizabeth Grabe. (2007) Taking Television Seriously: A Sound and Image Bite Analysis of Presidential Campaign Coverage, 1992-2004. Journal of Communication 57:4, pages 652-675.
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Brooke Barnett. (2016) Guilty and Threatening: Visual Bias in Television News Crime Stories. Journalism & Communication Monographs 5:3, pages 104-155.
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Maria Elizabeth GrabeAnnie LangXiaoquan Zhao. (2016) News Content and Form. Communication Research 30:4, pages 387-413.
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