Preview

The Agenda Setting Theory In The Times Of India

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
840 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Agenda Setting Theory In The Times Of India
An article in The Times of India, dated 31st December, written by columnists Durgesh Nandan Jha and Vishwa Mohan, reads, “Don’t let Nirbhaya’s fire die”. The article is a continuation of the 2012 Delhi gang rape case that took place on 16th December, where a 23 year old female physiotherapist intern was beaten and raped for ninety minutes by six men of which one was a juvenile aged 17 years. The 23-year-old woman and her male friend were on their way back from a movie, in a bus, where the six men attacked her, and while her friend attempted to save her he was beaten up by an iron rod and thrown out of the bus. Once the deed was done with the woman, she was also thrown out of the bus an hour later and was left un attended for a long period of …show more content…
Max McCombs and Dr. Donald Shaw developed the Agenda setting Theory in a study on the 1968 presidential election. The Agenda-setting theory described the capability of the media to influence the importance of topics on the public. Bernard Cohen (1963) stated: “The press may not be successful much of the time in telling people what to think, but it is stunningly successful in telling its readers what to think about.” As per the theory, the media gives a lot of importance to a specific news item that results in it spreading nationally or …show more content…
N. and Mohan, Vishwa. (2012 December 31). Don’t Let Nirbhaya’s Fire Die. The Times of India. Retrieved from http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-12-31/india/36078766_1_rpn-singh-sheila-dikshit-dwarka
Timesnowonline. (2012, December 17). Delhi rape case: Five arrested. Times Now. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9B12sQRogI
University of Twente. (2012). Agenda Setting Theory. Retrieved from

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    New York - On Saturday March 25th it had been an excruciating week for both men and women machine workers at the Triangle factory in lower Manhattan. The workers were making plans for the night and looking forward to their one day off, when suddenly flames combust from a waste basket underneath one of the workers tables. Workers hurried to get buckets of water to extinguish the fire but it had been too late. The fire had outburst consuming the air and expanded viciously to other waste bins and files. The blazing inferno cultivated and prolonged so rapidly after just half an hour the viscous fire had disintegrated the entire 9th, 10th and 11th floor . Later investigators found over a 140 corpses .…

    • 650 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bob Austin Case

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The victim was a young 23-year old paramedical student who was just about to begin an internship from her 4 year study program. To celebrate she ventured out one night along with her male companion to see a movie at a local Delhi cineplex. After leaving the theater they rode back home on a private bus. There they encountered a group of 6 drunk men, her male companion put up a fight but it was no use. The 6 men raped, beat , and violated the women with a metal rod. “The rod was inserted into her and it was pulled out with so much force that the act brought out her intestines... That is probably the only thing that explains such severe damage to her intestines,” (Rama,Lakshmi 1). Her body was covered in bite marks, she managed to survive the violent attack under critical conditions in the intensive care unit. The young girl who has been identified as Nirbhaya, meaning "fearless"s was brave and her fighting spirit didn’t want to give up, but her body had undergone too much damage, she died two days later. Four of the adult defendants found guilty were sentenced to death by hanging, one of them committed suicide, and the juvenile was given only three years of…

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Com 107 Final Study Guide

    • 2669 Words
    • 11 Pages

    * Over the last decade, we have seen a significant increase in “opinion-based” news and news organizations. Using agenda setting and framing --You should be able to discuss the ways in which “opinion-based” news (right or left) could impact audience’s perceptions of the issue, of politics, and of news credibility and bias?…

    • 2669 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Taken place in New York City on March 25th, 2011 was one of the biggest tragedies killing 146 workers. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a sweatshop factory which caught on such a huge fire and which spread so quickly. The workers consisted of women, mainly immigrant women and teenaged girls who did not speak English. They were all crammed into rooms with sewing machines and worked for 12 hours each day. The 8th, 9th and 10th floor of the building caught on fire. Most of the deaths could’ve been prevented but the owners were so selfish and uncaring so the workers were trapped inside during the fire since the doors were locked. The owners were Max Blanck and Isaac Harris. They fled to the roof to escape during the fire. The fire escape of…

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The case of this fire and its possible nefarious origins were of great interest to many people. People wrote and conducted investigations on their own, and others wrote pieces criticizing and commenting on the event. In most circumstances, however, people were on our side, the side of the female laborers! This was something that unseen previously. One newspaper article a few days after the fire completely abandoned the words “fire” and “accident”, and instead, they labeled the Triangle Fire a “Holocaust That Wiped Out One Hundred and Fifty Lives.” Amond the “six different agencies (that) initiated separate investigations of the Triangle tragedy,” Charles Whitman immediately began collecting evidence in order to answer public “demand for punishment of the owners.” In fact, the reason that Blanck and Harris ever faced any repercussions at all for not having up-to-date safety features is not as much because of the workers as because of the public support of the workers and the public outrage directed at the owners. The public was on our side and as frustrated about the tragedy as the workers who experienced it so it seemed. From the people on our side sprung forth one of the biggest changes for New York, the Committee of Safety; this was brought about by Henry Morgenthau after the Opera House meeting, where Rose Schneiderman gave her lovely speech. This meant so much more than the safety changes though. For the first time I can recall, “Morgenthau, represent(ing) the city’s financial elite” were supporting the lower-level workers. This was an incredible step for us as ladies and especially for us as workers in New York…

    • 1691 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    We The People Summary

    • 398 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Agenda setting is the media’s ability to select certain issues, legislation, policy, etc. and bring it into the public’s eye. The media selects these simply by determining the amount of importance it has on the nation’s public and whether or not they will gain ratings from the presentation of the issue. Once the media is convinced that it would be beneficial to present the issue to the public, it will do so through the lens it chooses. This is called the media’s selection bias and it means that it will present whichever side of the issue it wishes to push hardest into…

    • 398 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Frank Luntz Framing Theory

    • 1753 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The Framing Theory is a concept of “cognitive categorization,” with the basis that “meaning depends on context” (Scheufele 1999, Changingminds.org). Under the framing theory, an audience’s attention is drawn to events or issues placed within a frame, or a field of meaning, rather than on a particular topic. Although this sounds very similar to that of the Agenda Setting theory, framing is often a conscious choice by the media who act as gatekeepers, organizing and presenting these events and topics to the general public. When the frame, or surrounding elements, of a topic changes so does the meaning of the topic.…

    • 1753 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Before the first engines had arrived young girls had begun leaping from the ninth floor windows, crashing through glass overhangs or wires and were crushed to death on the sidewalk below. Fireman struggled to set up the vehicles and work around an increasing number of bodies filling the sidewalks and streets. Horrified crowds looked on screaming as more girls appeared at the windows of the ninth floor and one after another leaped, landing in heaps on top of each other. Despite desperate efforts to raise ladders and spread nets there was little the firefighters could do to help the terrified woman lining the windows of the ninth floor. The longest ladders only reached the seventh and the fire nets were useless to the girls who were falling from over 100 feet above. Several of the girls jumping were already on fire demonstrating that there was only the choice to jump or burn to death. Thousands continued to watch as firefighters poured water on the building and entered to find even more girls. The elevator shaft was clogged with at least thirty more bodies, almost all teenage girls; in the ninth floor workroom there were more than fifty more. In total the fire lasted only about thirty minutes. It was confined to the eighth, ninth, and tenth floors, and barely damaged the fireproof building itself at all . What was lost in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire were the lives of 146 innocent people, almost all teenage girls. Suffocated, burned to death, or crushed on the pavement after leaping to their certain death. The fire happened in broad daylight, on a busy, public corner in one of the most advanced, and largest industrial cities in the nation. The fire happened in front of a crowd of thousands, men and woman, young and old, rich and poor, powerful and powerless, newer and longstanding immigrants. This happened in front of a crowd of…

    • 1460 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    AP GOV

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Agenda Setting: the media helps determine which political part becomes part of the public debate.…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Agenda Setting Theory tells the audience what to think about. As media covers the debates, the audience interprets the news stories in correlation to what the media provides. Agenda Setting sets a focus, and shapes certain issues, like Hillary Clinton’s campaign, to influence the way the public views the issue. In her political campaign, Clinton has the media exposing strong stories over her commitment and her honesty towards the public. The voter’ opinions/views are being influences with what is being fed to them by social…

    • 246 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    So much so that the profession as a whole has developed several techniques to deliver this material in a manner that informs the viewer while holding the public’s interest for as long as possible. Frame-changing is one of these processes and refers to the journalistic practice of presenting news coverage through different topic frames over the life span of a news event (Schildkraut, 2013, p.25). This process allows the media to highlight different facts about a news story all while changing the manner in which the story itself is presented. It provides a fresh look at content to keep viewers interested in an older story, but still disseminates the same facts repeatedly. “Agenda setting” is another technique the news uses in broadcasting data. This method refers to the process by which certain issues or events are selected and highlighted by journalists or others groups and singled out to define and shape issues and events the public watches (Schildkraut, 2013, p. 27). When mass shootings occur the event garners tons of media attention because of the subject matter and the interest of the public in the event. Due to the marathon of coverage aimed at these occurrences, intentionally or not, the media is shaping how this violence is defined by American…

    • 1293 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dylan Thomas

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages

    "A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London," relates highly to the people in London. During this time period, London is being firebombed due to the…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    House in Fire

    • 663 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This house was a three-storeyed building. Some inmates of the house were on the second floor. The fire started from the ground floor. Soon, it spread to the first floor. The inmates of the house who had been entrapped on the second floor were crying for help. Someone in the crowd informed the fire brigade. The flames were rushing towards them. Their lives were in danger. Some of entrapped inmates of the house took the risk of rushing out through the ravaging flames. They sustained minor burn injuries. Those who were on the second floor had no way to escape their lives. They were just crying for help. The people outside were at a loss how to help the victims to come out.…

    • 663 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Building and House

    • 458 Words
    • 2 Pages

    This house was a three-storeyed building. Some inmates of the house were on the second floor. The fire started from the ground floor. Soon, it spread to the first floor. The inmates of the house who had been entrapped on the second floor were crying for help. Someone in the crowd informed the fire brigade. The flames were rushing towards them. Their lives were in danger. Some of entrapped inmates of the house took the risk of rushing out through the ravaging flames. They sustained minor burn injuries. Those who were on the second floor had no way to escape their lives. They were just crying for help. The people outside were at a loss how to help the victims to come out.…

    • 458 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays