The face(t)s of biotech in the nineties: how the German press framed modern biotechnology.

Public Underst Sci

Friedrich Schiller University, College for Social and Behavioral Sciences, Department of Media Science, Jena, Germany.

Published: April 2002

The following article deals with the different images of modern biotechnology created by the German press in the last decade of the twentieth century. To describe these images we have chosen the theoretical concept of framing, which in general denotes the idea that the media deal with certain issues in different ways and that therefore the coverage offers different perspectives to the reader. We understand a frame as a certain pattern of a text that is composed of several different text elements. We assume that some of these text elements group together systematically in a specific way, thereby forming a certain pattern that can be identified across several texts in a sample. These patterns we call frames. By means of cluster analysis we are able to identify not only predefined but also newly emerging frames and the way framing of an issue changes over time. This methodological approach allows us to give a dynamic overview of how the German press dealt with biotechnology in the early and late nineties.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0963-6625/11/2/304DOI Listing

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