Middle East And Canada
In December 1985, the Canadian press reported the death by suicide of hundreds of field mice in the Middle East. In an apparently instinctive reaction to a problem
of over-population, the mice wilfully plunged to their doom off the cliffs of the Golan Heights. This bizarre story was the subject not only of straight news coverage in
the Canadian press, but also of an editorial in the Globe and Mail on December 20. On November 1, 1985, the Globe and Mail also ran a photograph of a visiting
Roman Catholic priest from Brazil, saying prayers on the banks of the Jordan River at the site where Christ is said to have been baptized. Standing alertly near the
priest was an Israeli soldier with a ...
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on the Mattawa would this religious item have been deemed worthy of
coverage? Or was it the newspapers' sense of the irony of these events, of their news value as symbols depicting the pervasive conflict and violence we have come
to associate with the Middle East that led to their selection for publication from the reams of teletype endlessly flowing into the editorial departments of the Canadian
press? It would seem that even when the subject matter is scientific or religious--about mice or monsignors--the press is inclined to remind its readers of the
inherently violent nature of the Middle East, and a fundamentally negative image is developed or reinforced. It is, Canadians are told in effect, a region so bleak and
hopeless that even its despairing mice are driven to take their lives.
The purpose of this study is to examine in an empirical fashion Canadian daily press coverage of the Middle East to establish, inter alia, what type of image of the
region and of its principal ...
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rather than cooperation, it was hypothesized, would be the dominant orientation of the press with articles focusing on political divisions, disasters,
violence and war rather than on softer news related to such subjects as culture, education and development (Cuthbert, 1980; Dewitt & Kirton, 1989; Hackett,
1989; Inyang, 1985; Onu, 1979; Schroeder, 1977; Sinclair, 1983).
(4) On the perennial subject of bias towards Israel or the Arab states and the Palestinians, it was expected that, while the press would be critical of the party deemed
responsible for any specific violent acts, it was likely to show reasonable balance even at such times on the central issue of a resolution of the ...
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"Middle East And Canada." Essayworld.com. June 30, 2007. Accessed December 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Middle-East-And-Canada/67248.
"Middle East And Canada." Essayworld.com. June 30, 2007. Accessed December 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Middle-East-And-Canada/67248.
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