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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research essay that explores the relationship between the many forms of the media and religion. How do journalists report about religious events or do they? Are journalists knowledgeable about religion? Where does the public gain its opinions about religion, faith and spirituality? These are the questions explored in this essay. The historical mistrust between religious leaders and the press is based on a number of issues which were revealed in a 1993 study. This writer argues that the media do, in fact, influence what people believe. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Relmed.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
basis, some have daily columns. Major magazines typically offer articles concerning a specific religion when something within those beliefs are directly related to a major news event or to world
affairs. It is conflicts that sell publications. Religion, in and of itself, does not sell newspapers and magazines except when there is some sort of bizarre behavior, scandal, or some
other sort of dramatic conflict involved (Sheller 70; Hubbard and Smart 5)). Articles regarding any specific religion are based on the interpretations and
values of the journalist writing the article. The conclusion one can logically make is that the media and religion have a tenuous relationship, at best. Since few media concerns, print
or broadcast do not have a journalist who covers religion on a daily basis, thus when a news story involving religion breaks, editors assign reporters who are available to cover
it. These reporters typically have no knowledge much less experience in the field of religion. This causes mistakes to be published which creates and exacerbates the already tenuous relationship between
religious leaders and the press (Sheler 71; Clark 2). There can be no denying that the media, all forms of the media from
print to radio and television broadcast to influence the receptors impressions, attitudes, and opinions of religion and religious beliefs. At least the last two generations have been raised with television
being a prime aspect of their lives. The symbolisms depicted do have an effect on what people, especially young people believe. One cannot have messages imprinted on the brain with
those messages becoming a part of ones mind at some level (Sheler 70; Clark 1; Hoover 1). Hoover points out that even CD-ROMs are impacting young people and cites Charlton
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