Rhetorical Media Framing of Two First Lady Political Candidates Across Cultures

Kalyango and Winfield comment that their study examines the rhetoric used to frame news coverage of two first lady candidates from Uganda and the US in the final weeks of their first political campaigns for legislative office, while their spouses were still serving as president. It assesses news cov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global media journal 2009-10, Vol.8 (15), p.N_A
Hauptverfasser: Kalyango, Yusuf, Winfield, Betty H
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Winfield, Betty H
description Kalyango and Winfield comment that their study examines the rhetoric used to frame news coverage of two first lady candidates from Uganda and the US in the final weeks of their first political campaigns for legislative office, while their spouses were still serving as president. It assesses news coverage in two distinct political cultures with different forms of democracy in "The Daily Monitor" and "The New Vision of Uganda," as well as New York's "Daily News" and "The New York Times." Results show that newspapers emphasized gender-specific rhetoric to frame Janet Museveni and Hillary Clinton during their campaigns. The US newspapers covered Clinton's campaign speeches and platform on international peace initiatives and national security, yet the Ugandan press did not highlight Museveni's statements on the northern war and peace initiatives. Kalyango and Winfield argue that these newspapers underscored their first lady familial dudies, and framed them as emotionally weak and unfit to serve beyond political spousal roles.
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subjects Campaigns
Candidates
Clinton, Hillary Rodham
Culture
Democracy
Elections
Gender
Museveni, Janet Kataaha
National Security
News Coverage
News media
Peace
Political attitudes
Presidents
Rhetoric
Spouses
Uganda
United States of America
Wives
title Rhetorical Media Framing of Two First Lady Political Candidates Across Cultures
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