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Martin to Brown
Authors:Danielle K Kilgo  Rachel R Mourao  George Sylvie
Institution:1. The Media School, Indiana University, 601 E. Kirkwood, Bloomington, IN 47401, USA.dkilgo@iu.du;3. Michigan State University, USA. E-mail: rachelmourao@gmail.com. ORCID ?http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8229-7247;4. The University of Texas at Austin, USA. E-mail: g.sylvie@utexas.edu. ORCID ?http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2028-312X
Abstract:The rise of the modern Black Lives Matter movement can be traced back to two key events, the 2012 death of Trayvon Martin and the 2014 death of Michael Brown. Research routinely showed that mainstream media’s narrative choices marginalize and delegitimize protesters and their causes, a pattern known as the protest paradigm. This study provides a longitudinal examination of how the same mainstream media system varied in their coverage of similar events and the degree to which journalists challenged the predicted paradigms conceptualized in other academic work. A content analysis of national newspaper coverage revealed that news before the judicial rulings focused on protesters’ tactics (violence versus peaceful) and changed to the realm of ideas (grievances and demands) after the assailants were considered not guilty of wrongdoing. No progression was found in legitimizing coverage of protests between the two cases.
Keywords:Black Lives Matter  protest paradigm  newspaper coverage  content analysis  race  police brutality
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