«‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters» читать бесплатно онлайн книгу 📙 автора Kevin Rothrock в электронной библиотеке MyBook
  1. Главная
  2. Политическое управление
  3. ⭐️Kevin Rothrock
  4. 📚«‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters»
‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters

Отсканируйте код для установки мобильного приложения MyBook

Бесплатно

0 
(0 оценок)

‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters

21 мин.

20 Мбайт

2021 год

0+

Введите вашу электронную почту и читайте эту и еще 649 000 книг

Оцените книгу
В этом выпуске

In late 2019, many Internet users started noticing that the Russian state media was increasingly describing gas explosions as “gas pops” in news coverage — even when the incidents caused major damage to life and property. In fact, the number of “gas pops” mentioned in news reports jumped from a few dozen stories in early 2017 to thousands of such reports by January 2020. Meduza’s sources in the presidential administration and Russia’s security agencies say this is the result of a targeted policy to introduce more “favorable information conditions” meant to avoid a public panic when reporting gas explosions. Since February 2020, when Meduza first published its findings about “gas pops” in Russian headlines, the significance of euphemisms in news reporting has only grown with the global spread of coronavirus. To understand this phenomenon better, “The Naked Pravda” welcomed back media scholar Sarah Oates, a professor at the University of Maryland, and Alexey Kovalev, Meduza's head of investigative reporting. “The Naked Pravda” comes out on Fridays. Catch every new episode by subscribing at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or other platforms. If you have a question or comment about the show, please write to Kevin Rothrock at kevin@meduza.io with the subject line: “The Naked Pravda.”

Слушайте онлайн полную версию подкаста «‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters» автора Kevin Rothrock с озвучкой от Анонимный чтец на сайте электронной библиотеки MyBook.ru. Скачивайте приложение для iOS или Android и слушайте «‘Russian Journalism's Newspeak’: How the Kremlin's euphemisms creep into reporting about disasters» где угодно даже без интернета. 

Подробная информация
Дата написания: 
11 апреля 2020
Год издания: 
2021
Дата поступления: 
27 февраля 2021

Автор выпуска