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EN
This is an account of the Polish press coverage of the canonization of Andrzej Bobola, the translation of his relics from Rome to Warsaw and the reactions of the general public to these events in an atmosphere marked by fears of war
EN
This paper analyses the long-term coverage (1990–2014) of German reunification by six German newspapers. Our quantitative content analysis shows how often the press covers the event, what the content of the coverage is, and how journalists evaluate the reunification process. As we have analysed newspapers of different locations, ranges, types, and editorial lines, we can see whether newspapers cover German reunification differently. Our analysis shows that the amount of coverage of reunification quickly decreases, and only a few articles are published prominently. The press reports on more differences between East and West Germany than similarities; about one third of the articles mentions problems and conflicts, although they become less important over time. All in all, positive evaluations of German reunification outweigh negative judgments and increase over time. We see evidence that the placement, content, and tone of coverage highly depends on the type, editorial line, range, and location of newspapers.
EN
The aim of this paper is to analyse the media coverage provided by two Polish daily newspapers (Gazeta Wyborcza and Przegląd Sportowy) during the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games according to the athletes’ gender. The paper makes reference to agenda setting theory and media framing and it is based on an analysis of photographs of the games on the front pages and the sporting articles’ main themes. The analysis reveals that the press focused mainly on the Polish medal winners and did not reveal significant differences between women’s and men’s press coverage. Results show that the discourse of nationalism overrode the discourse of gender, the newspapers’ coverage being mainly based on the success of the Polish athletes, regardless of their gender.
PL
Artykuł stanowi próbę zbadania języka medialnych przekazów sportowych w „Gazecie Wyborczej” pod kątem militaryzacji języka sportu i wynikających z tego konsekwencji dla sposobu portretowania sportu kobiet i mężczyzn. Celami badania było: sprawdzenie, ile miejsca zajmują przekazy prasowe dotyczące sportu kobiet i mężczyzn oraz poznanie, czy metafory wojenne oraz metafory ciała jako broni, maszyny lub narzędzia występują w sportowych przekazach prasowych w „Gazecie Wyborczej” w latach 2010–2013. Badanie wykazało znaczne niedoreprezentowanie przekazów na temat sportu kobiet oraz występowanie istotnie częściej metafor wojennych w artykułach dotyczących sportu mężczyzn. Sposób nazywania sportowców oraz występowanie metafor ciała jako maszyny czy broni również wskazuje na powszechne używanie terminologii odsyłającej do militaryzmu i działań zbrojnych. Sposób i częstość użycia metafor wojennych w opisie sportu mężczyzn uwidocznia podtrzymywanie tradycyjnego dyskursu męskości opartego na sile fizycznej, wytrzymałości i agresywności.
EN
This study focused on the language of media sports coverage in Gazeta Wyborcza. Special attention was paid to militarization of sports language and consequences of this process for portraying women’s and men’s sport. The main purpose of this study was to verify how much space is devoted to women’s and men’s sport and if there were martial metaphors and metaphors of body as a weapon, machine or tool in the sports press coverage. The study indicated the major underrepresentation of women’s sport press coverage as well as the significantly higher frequency of the martial metaphors in the texts about men’s sport. The strategies of sportspeople’s naming and usage of the metaphors of body as a weapon or machine pointed out at the militarization of the language. The frequency and the manner of utilization of martial metaphors in portraying men’s sport emphasized the traditional discourse of ‘male power’, endurance and aggressiveness.
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