- Title
- Investigation into HIV/AIDS coverage in selected South African newspapers
- Creator
- Moqasa, Nketsi Abel
- Subject
- AIDS (Disease) in mass media
- Subject
- Mass media -- South Africa
- Subject
- Journalism -- Social aspects
- Subject
- AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa
- Subject
- Content analysis (Communication)
- Subject
- Press -- South Africa
- Date
- 2013
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- M Soc Sc (Com)
- Identifier
- vital:11367
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1006285
- Identifier
- AIDS (Disease) in mass media
- Identifier
- Mass media -- South Africa
- Identifier
- Journalism -- Social aspects
- Identifier
- AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa
- Identifier
- Content analysis (Communication)
- Identifier
- Press -- South Africa
- Description
- This study investigates HIV/AIDS coverage in selected South African newspapers. The rationale for the study hinges on the fact that the media’s role in informing society about social issues, such as HIV/AIDS, is of paramount importance. The study adopted, principally, the content analysis method and, as a supplement, discourse analysis. Four daily newspapers were content-analysed, namely: Daily Dispatch, Daily Sun, Sowetan and The Star. A total of 288 editions of newspapers, spanning a period of twelve months (January to December 2010) were sampled. This study is informed by agenda setting theory. Discourse analysis was used to determine the compliance of these newspapers to media guides on the use of appropriate language or terminologies. The tone, sentence structures used when disseminating HIV/AIDS stories were also examined. The results revealed that HIV/AIDS coverage by these newspapers is reasonable even though the prominence given to HIV/AIDS issues is dissatisfactory in terms of placement on the page, headline font-size and number of paragraphs devoted to HIV/AIDS stories. 5.0% of HIV/AIDS-oriented stories were placed on the front page; 93.8% on the inside pages while 1.3% were placed on the back pages. It was also found that news and feature were used equally to disseminate HIV/AIDS issues. These genres constituted 50% each. On the other hand, the results revealed a statistically non-significant relationship between the newspapers and categories; that is: (25.09 2 , p 0.122 0.05 ). Results further revealed that these newspapers used appropriate terminology and value-neutral language in their stories. The tone of the messages was found to be positive and encouraging.
- Format
- 167 leaves; 30 cm
- Format
- Publisher
- University of Fort Hare
- Publisher
- Faculty of Social Sciences & Humanities
- Language
- English
- Rights
- University of Fort Hare
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