Abstract
Using a multiple-method approach that combines content analysis and experiment, this study tested the first three steps of the process model of framing in China's specific media environment, in which media have a special relationship with the ruling group and the audiences. The study supports the first two steps of the process model and found that the ruling group's view of religion greatly shapes the media's framing of religion, which influences the audiences’ individual framing. The third step that predicts a correlation between the audiences’ individual framing and their individual political attitude, however, is not supported. An interesting phenomenon appeared: students not exposed to the newspaper articles tended more to support the government's dealing with religion as a political issue than did those exposed to one or two newspaper articles.
Acknowledgements
Qingjiang Yao is a third-year doctoral student at the School of Journalism and Mass Communications, University of South Carolina–Columbia. The Author thanks Qinghe Yao and Zhaoning Liu for their help in conducting the experiment
Notes
1. Due to limitation of the research design, the fourth process, which addresses that the audiences’ attitude toward an issue will influence the journalists’ building frame, is not tested in this study.
2. At present, the website offers access only to articles over the last six years.
3. Since ANOVA's assumption of equal variances was violated, non-parametric tests became more powerful and were adopted.