Buradasınız

Political Bias in a Turkish Political TV Interview

Journal Name:

Publication Year:

Author NameUniversity of Author
Abstract (2. Language): 
The study aims to provide empirical data on the question of partiality in political TV interviews in Turkey. The model developed by Clayman and Heritage (2002) and Clayman et al. (2007) and extended by Huls and Varwijk (2011) is used to analyze questions asked by interviewers in the political TV discussion program Siyaset Meydanı to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu. The initial 30-minute parts of each interview have been examined to reveal aggressive question designs and the results are evaluated in comparison to each other in terms of possible bias favoring or disfavoring one of the politicians. The conclusion is that though it is hard to make distinctions regarding the other five measures – initiative, directness, assertiveness, adversarialness, accountability and persistence – interviewers seem to be partial in terms of assertiveness that they utilize in their questions, favoring Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and disfavoring Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
61
87

REFERENCES

References: 

Alparslan, E. (2007). KonuĢma Dilinden Yazı Diline: Abecesel Çeviri - Yazı Tasarımı. Edebiyat Fakültesi Dergisi 24:1.
Bernhardt, D., S. Krasa, and M. Polborn. (2008). Political Polarization and the Electoral Effects of Media Bias.Journal of Public Economics 92 (5/6): 1092–1104.
Clayman, S.E., Elliott, M.N., Heritage, J. and McDonald, L.L. (2007). When Does the Watchdog Bark? Conditions of Aggressive Questioning in Presidential News Conferences. American Sociological Review 72: 23–41.
Clayman, S.E., and Heritage, J. (2002). Questioning Presidents: Journalistic Deference and Adversarialness in the Press Conferences of Eisenhower and Reagan. Journal of Communication 52: 749–75.
Cotter, C. (2001). Discourse and Media. In: Schiiffrin, D., Tannen, D., Hamilton, H. E. (Eds), The Handbook of Discourse Analysis. Blackwell Publishers, 416-437.
Groseclose, T., and Milyo, J. (2005). A Measure of Media Bias.Quarterly Journal of Economics, CXX, 1191–1237.
Huls, E. and Varwijk, J. (2011). Political bias in TV interviews. Discourse & Society 22: 48-65.
Manheim, J. B. 1979. The Honeymoon‟s Over: The News Conference and the Development of Presidential Style. The Journal of Politics 41:55–74.
McCarthy, J. D., McPhail, C., and Smith, J. (1996). Images of Protest: Dimensions of Selection Bias in Media Coverage of Washington Demonstrations, 1982 and 1991. American Sociological Review, 61:478-99.
Smith, J., McCarthy, J.D., McPhail, C., and Augustyn, B. (2001). From protest to agenda building: description bias in media coverage of protest events in Washington, DC. Soc. Forces 79:1397-423.
van Dijk, T. A. (2001). Critical Discourse Analysis. In: Schiiffrin, D., Tannen, D., Hamilton, H. E. (Eds), The Handbook of Discourse Analysis. Blackwell Publishers, 352-372.

Thank you for copying data from http://www.arastirmax.com