J
Jennifer Rauch
Researcher at Long Island University
Publications - 14
Citations - 826
Jennifer Rauch is an academic researcher from Long Island University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mainstream & Alternative media. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications receiving 756 citations.
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All the News That's Fit to Sell: How the Market Transforms Information Into News:
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Activists as interpretive communities: rituals of consumption and interaction in an alternative media audience:
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the symbolic uses of news in an activist audience and extend theories of news reading as a ritual act through which social bonds are produced, and propose that this interpretive community achieved its identity in part by rejecting mainstream media, so that performing the role of "alternative reader" served as a marker of individual taste and group belonging.
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Gender in Crime News: A Case Study Test of the Chivalry Hypothesis
TL;DR: The chivalry hypothesis posits that female criminals receive more lenient treatment in the criminal justice system and in news coverage of their crimes than their male counterparts as mentioned in this paper, which is called the Bonnie-and-Clyde effect.
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From Seattle 1999 to New York 2004: A Longitudinal Analysis of Journalistic Framing of the Movement for Democratic Globalization
Jennifer Rauch,Sunitha Chitrapu,Susan Tyler Eastman,John Christopher Evans,Christopher Paine,Peter G. Mwesige +5 more
TL;DR: This article examined how journalistic framing of the democratic globalization movement evolved in the five years after its 1999 emergence in Seattle and found signs of both resilience and change in the newspaper's coverage, which demonstrates complex interactions between reporters, activist groups and real-world events.
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Exploring the Alternative–Mainstream Dialectic: What “Alternative Media” Means to a Hybrid Audience†
TL;DR: The authors explored what the term "alternative media" means to users through an audience survey (n = 224) and revealed values and practices that respondents agreed were important to alternative media.