Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
  • Cited by 563
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
November 2009
Print publication year:
2002
Online ISBN:
9780511613623

Book description

The news interview has become a major vehicle for presenting broadcast news and political commentary, and a primary interface between the institutions of journalism and government. This much-needed work examines the place of the news interview in Anglo-American society and considers its historical development in the United States and Britain. The main body of the book discusses the fundamental norms and conventions that shape conduct in the modern interview. It explores the particular recurrent practices through which journalists balance competing professional norms that encourage both objective and adversarial treatment of public figures. Through analyses of well-known interviews, the book explores the relationship between journalists and public figures and also how, in the face of aggressive questioning, politicians and other public figures struggle to stay 'on message' and pursue their own agendas. This comprehensive and wide-ranging book will be essential reading for students and researchers in sociolinguistics, media and communication studies.

Reviews

‘… a welcome addition to the growing number of substantive studies into the local production of media discourse … an excellent introduction to, and summary of, the authors’ and others’ work gathered over a number of years, and places this in the context of the evolution of political programming and interviews in the USA and UK.’

Source: Journal of Sociolinguistics

'… a fascinating account of the process of news interview. … this is an eminently readable book which readers with an interest in news media should find thoroughly interesting and useful.'

Source: Debate

Refine List

Actions for selected content:

Select all | Deselect all
  • View selected items
  • Export citations
  • Download PDF (zip)
  • Save to Kindle
  • Save to Dropbox
  • Save to Google Drive

Save Search

You can save your searches here and later view and run them again in "My saved searches".

Please provide a title, maximum of 40 characters.
×

Contents

References
Adkins, Barbara. 1992. Arguing the point: the management and context of disputacious challenges in radio current affairs interviews. Australian Journalism Review, 14 (1): 37–49
Albert, Ethel M. 1972. Culture patterning of speech behavior in Borundi. In J. Gumperz and D. Hymes (eds.) Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication. New York: Basil Blackwell, pp. 72–105
Altheide, David L. 1974. Creating Reality: How TV News Distorts Events. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Atkinson, J. Maxwell. 1982. Understanding formality: notes on the categorisation and production of “formal” interaction. British Journal of Sociology, 33: 86–117
Atkinson, J. Maxwell. 1984. Our Masters' Voices. London: Routledge
Atkinson, J. Maxwell and P. Drew. 1979. Order in Court: the Organisation of Verbal Interaction in Judicial Settings. London: Macmillan
Aufderheide, Patricia (ed.). 1999. Communications Policy and the Public Interest. New York: Guilford Press
Auletta, Ken. 1991. Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way. New York: Random House
Bavelas, Janet B., Black, A., Bryson, L., and Mullett, J.. 1988. Political equivocation: a situational explanation. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 7 (2): 137–46
Beach, Wayne A. 1993. Transitional regularities for casual “okay” usages. Journal of Pragmatics, 19: 325–52
Bell, Allan. 1991. The Language of News Media. Oxford: Blackwell
Bell, Allan and Peter Garrett. 1998. Approaches to Media Discourse. Oxford: Blackwell
Blumler, Jay G. and Michael Gurevitch. 1981. Politicians and the press: an essay on role relationships. In Dan Nimmo and Keith Sanders (eds.) Handbook of Political Communication. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 467–93
Boyd, Elizabeth and John Heritage. Forthcoming. Taking the patient's personal history: questioning during verbal examination. In John Heritage and Douglas Maynard (eds.) Practising Medicine: Structure and Process in Primary Care Encounters. Cambridge University Press
Brown, Penelope and Stephen Levinson. 1987. Politeness: Some Universals in Language Usage. Cambridge University Press
Bull, Peter. 1994. On identifying questions, replies, and non-replies in political interviews. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 13 (2): 115–31
Bull, Peter. 1998. Equivocation theory and news interviews. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 17 (1): 36–51
Bull, Peter and Judy, Elliott. 1998. Level of threat: a means of assessing interviewer toughness and neutrality. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 17 (2): 220–44
Bull, Peter, Judy, Elliott, Derrol, Palmer, and Libby, Walker. 1996. Why politicians are three-faced: the face model of political interviews. British Journal of Social Psychology, 35: 267–84
Bull, Peter and Kate, Mayer. 1988. Interruptions in political interviews: a study of Margaret Thatcher and Neil Kinnock. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 7 (1): 35–45
Bull, Peter and Kate Mayer. 1993. How not to answer questions in political interviews. Political Psychology, 14 (4): 651–66
Chafe, Wallace. 1986. Evidentiality in English conversation and academic writing. In Wallace Chafe and Johanna Nichols (eds.) Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology. Norwood NJ: Ablex, pp. 261–72
Clayman, Steven E. 1988. Displaying neutrality in television news interviews. Social Problems, 35 (4): 474–92
Clayman, Steven E. 1989. The production of punctuality: social interaction, temporal organization, and social structure. American Journal of Sociology, 95 (3): 659–91
Clayman, Steven E. 1990. From talk to text: newspaper accounts of reporter-source interactions. Media, Culture and Society, 12 (1): 79–104
Clayman, Steven E. 1991. News interview openings: aspects of sequential organization. In P. Scannell (ed.) Broadcast Talk: A Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 48–75
Clayman, Steven E. 1992. Footing in the achievement of neutrality: the case of news interview discourse. In P. Drew and J. Heritage (eds.) Talk at Work. Cambridge University Press, pp. 163–98
Clayman, Steven E. 1993. Reformulating the question: a device for answering / not answering questions in news interviews and press conferences. Text, 13 (2): 159–88
Clayman, Steven E. 1998. Some uses of address terms in news interviews. Paper presented at the annual meetings of the National Communication Association, San Francisco, November, 1998
Clayman, Steven E. 2001. Answers and evasions. Language in Society, 30: 403–42
Clayman, Steven E. 2002. Tribune of the people: maintaining the legitimacy of adversarial journalism. Media, Culture and Society, 24: 191–210
Clayman, Steven E. Forthcoming. Disagreements and third parties: the problem of neutralism in panel news interviews. Journal of Pragmatics
Clayman, Steven E. and Virginia Teas Gill. Forthcoming. Conversation analysis. In Alan Bryman and Melissa Hardy (eds.) Handbook of Data Analysis. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Clayman, Steven E. and John, Heritage. 2002. Questioning presidents: journalistic deference and adversarialness in the press conferences of Eisenhower and Reagan. Journal of Communication, 52: in press
Clayman, Steven E. and Douglas W. Maynard. 1995. Ethnomethodology and conversation analysis. In P. ten Have and G. Psathas (eds.) Situated order: Studies in the Social Organization of Talk and Embodied Activities. Washington DC: University Press of America, pp. 1–30
Clayman, Steven E. and Jack, Whalen. 1988/89. When the medium becomes the message: the case of the Rather–Bush encounter. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 22: 241–72
Cockerell, M. 1988. Live from Number 10: The Inside Story of Prime Ministers and TV. London: Faber and Faber
Cordon, Gavin. 1997. Home news. Press Association Ltd., 14 May
Croteau, David and William Hoynes. 1994. By Invitation Only: How the Media Limit Political Debate. Monroe, ME: Common Courage
Curran, James, Michael Gurevitch, and Janet Woollacott (eds.). 1977. Mass Communication and Society. London: Edward Arnold
Davidson, Judy. 1984. Subsequent versions of invitations, offers, requests, and proposals dealing with potential or actual rejection. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.) Structures of Social Action. Cambridge University Press, pp. 102–28
Day, Robin. 1961. Television: A Personal Report. London: Hutchinson
Day, Robin. 1975. Day by Day. London: William Kimber
Day, Robin. 1989. Grand Inquisitor. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson
Day, Robin. 1993. … But With Respect: Memorable Interviews With Statesmen and Politicians. London: Trafalgar Square
Dimbleby, Jonathan. 1975. Richard Dimbleby: A Biography. London: Hodder and Stoughton
Donaldson, Sam. 1987. Hold On, Mr. President! New York: Random House
Drew, Paul and John Heritage. 1992. Analyzing talk at work: an introduction. In P. Drew and J. Heritage (eds.) Talk at Work. Cambridge University Press, pp. 3–65
Du Brow, Rick. 1990. Did Rather–Bush tiff help sink CBS anchor?Los Angeles Times, 6 Jan: sec. F, p. 1
Duranti, Alessandro and Elinor Ochs. 1979. Left-dislocation in Italian conversation. Syntax and Semantics Vol. 12: Discourse and Syntax, pp. 377–416
Efron, Edith. 1971. The News Twisters. Los Angeles: Nash
Ekman, Paul and Wallace V. Friesen. 1975. Unmasking the Face. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall
Elliott, Judy and Peter, Bull. 1996. A question of threat: face threats in questions posed during televised political interviews. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 6: 49–72
Elliott, Philip. 1972. The Making of a Television Series: A Case Study in the Production of Culture. London: Constable
Epstein, Edward Jay. 1973. News From Nowhere. New York: Random House
Fairclough, Norman. 1992. Discourse and Social Change. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press
Fairclough, Norman. 1995. Media Discourse. London: Edward Arnold
Fallows, James M. 1996. Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy. New York: Vintage Books
Fishman, Mark. 1980. Manufacturing the News. Austin: University of Texas Press
Fowler, M. and Brenner, D.. 1982. A marketplace approach to broadcast regulation. Texas Law Review, 60: 207–57
Fowler, Roger. 1991. Language in the News: Discourse and Ideology in the Press. London: Routledge
Franklin, Marc A. 1981. The First Amendment and the Fourth Estate. Second edition. Mineola, NY: Foundation Press
Friendly, Fred. 1967. Due to Circumstances Beyond Our Control … New York: Random House
Gans, Herbert. 1972. The famine in American mass communications research: comments on Hirsch, Tuchman, and Gecas. American Journal of Sociology, 77: 697–705
Gans, Herbert. 1979. Deciding What's News. New York: Random House
Garcia, Angela. 1991. Dispute resolution without disputing: how the interactional organization of mediation hearings minimizes argumentative talk. American Sociological Review, 56: 818–35
Gerbner, George and Larry, Gross. 1976. Living with television: the violence profile. Journal of Communication, 26: 172–99
Gibson, Janine. 1999. Now Mr. Howard, I want to ask you one more time . . . The Guardian, 8 Dec: Home Pages, p. 2
Gitlin, Todd. 1980. The Whole World is Watching: Mass Media in the Making and Unmaking of the New Left. Berkeley: University of California Press
Glasgow Media Group. 1976. Bad News. London: Routledge
Glenn, Phillip J. 1995. Laughing at and laughing with: negotiations of participant alignments through conversational laughter. In P. ten Have and G. Psathas (eds.) Interaction competence. Washington DC: University Press of America, pp. 43–56
Goffmen, Erving. 1955. On face work. Psychiatry, 18: 213–31
Goffmen, Erving. 1959. The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Garden City, NY: Doubleday
Goffmen, Erving. 1971. Relations in Public: Microstudies of the Public Order. New York: Harper and Row
Goffmen, Erving. 1981. Footing. In E. Goffman (ed.) Forms of Talk. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press
Goldberg, Robert and Gerald Jay Goldberg. 1990. Anchors: Brokaw, Jennings, Rather and the Evening News. Secaucus, NJ: Birch Lane Press
Goodwin, Charles. 1996. Transparent vision. In E. Ochs, E. Schegloff, and S. Thompson (eds.) Interaction and Grammar. Cambridge University Press, pp. 370–404
Greatbatch, David L. 1986a. Aspects of topical organisation in news interviews: the use of agenda shifting procedures by interviewees. Media, Culture and Society, 8: 441–55
Greatbatch, David L. 1986b. Some standard uses of supplementary questions in news interviews. In Belfast Working Papers in Language and Linguistics, Vol. 8, ed. J. Wilson and B. Crow, Jordanstown: University of Ulster, pp. 86–123
Greatbatch, David L. 1988. A turn-taking system for British news interviews. Language in Society, 17 (3): 401–30
Greatbatch, David L. 1992. The management of disagreement between news interviewees. In P. Drew and J. Heritage (eds.) Talk at Work. Cambridge University Press, pp. 268–301
Greatbatch, David and Robert, Dingwall. 1997. Argumentative talk in divorce mediation settings. American Sociological Review, 62: 151–70
Gurevitch, Michael, T. Bennett, J. Curran, and J. Woollacott (eds.). 1982. Culture, Society, and the Media. London: Methuen
Hall, Stuart. 1973. A world at one with itself. In Stanley Cohen and Jock Young (eds.) The Manufacture of News. London: Constable, pp. 85–94
Hall, Stuart, Chas Critcher, Tony Jefferson, John Clarke, and Brian Roberts. 1978. Policing the Crisis: Mugging, the State, and Law and Order. New York: Holmes and Meier
Hallin, Daniel C. 1994. The media, the war in Vietnam, and political support: a critique of the thesis of an oppositional media. In D. Hallin We Keep American On Top of the World. New York: Routledge
Hallin, Daniel C. 1997. Commercialism and professionalism in the American news media. In James Curran and Michael Gurevitch (eds.) Mass Media and Society, pp. 243–64
Hallin, Daniel C. and Paolo, Mancini. 1984. Speaking of the President: political structure and representational form in US and Italian Television News. Theory and Society, 13: 829–50
Halloran, James D., Philip Elliott, and Graham Murdock. 1969. Demonstrations and Communication: A Case Study. Harmondsworth: Penguin
Harris, Sandra. 1986. Interviewers' questions in broadcast interviews. In Belfast Working Papers in Language and Linguistics Vol. 8, ed. J. Wilson and B. Crow, Jordanstown: University of Ulster, pp. 50–85
Harris, Sandra. 1991. Evasive action: how politicians respond to questions in political interviews. In P. Scannell (ed.) Broadcast Talk, pp. 76–99. London: Sage
Heritage, John. 1984a. Garfinkel and Ethnomethodology. Cambridge: Polity Press
Heritage, John. 1984b. A change-of-state token and aspects of its sequential placement. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.) Structures of Social Action. Cambridge University Press, pp. 299–345
Heritage, John. 1985. Analyzing news interviews: aspects of the production of talk for an overhearing audience. In T. A. Dijk (ed.) Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Volume 3. New York: Academic Press, pp. 95–119
Heritage, John. 1988. Explanations as accounts: a conversation analytic perspective. In C. Antaki (ed.) Understanding Everyday Explanation: A Casebook of Methods. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 127–44
Heritage, John. 1995. Conversation analysis: methodological aspects. In U. M. Quasthoff (ed.) Aspects of Oral Communication. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 391–418
Heritage, John. 1997. Conversation analysis and institutional talk: analyzing data. In D. Silverman (ed.) Qualitative Research: Theory, Method and Practice. London: Sage, pp. 160–82
Heritage, John. Forthcoming a. Designing questions and setting agendas in the news interview. In J. Mandelbaum, P. Glenn, and C. LeBaron (eds.) Unearthing the Taken-for-Granted: Studies in Language and Social Interaction. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum
Heritage, John. Forthcoming b. The limits of questioning: negative interrogatives and hostile question content. Journal of Pragmatics
Heritage, John and David, Greatbatch. 1986. Generating applause: a study of rhetoric and response at party political conferences. American Journal of Sociology, 92 (1): 110–57
Heritage, John and David Greatbatch. 1991. On the institutional character of institutional talk: the case of news interviews. In D. Boden and D. H. Zimmerman (eds.) Talk and Social Structure. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 93–137
Heritage, John and Andrew, Roth. 1995. Grammar and institution: questions and questioning in the broadcast news interview. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 28 (1): 1–60
Heritage, John and Marja-Leena, Sorjonen. 1994. Constituting and maintaining activities across sequences: and-prefacing as a feature of question design. Language in Society, 23: 1–29
Heritage, John and Watson, D. R.. 1980. Aspects of the properties of formulations: some instances analyzed. Semiotica, 30: 245–62
Hess, Stephen. 1981. The Washington Reporters. Washington: Brookings Institution
Holt, Elizabeth. 1994. Reporting on talk: the use of direct reported speech in conversation. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 29 (3): 219–45
Horn, Laurence. 1989. A Natural History of Negation. University of Chicago Press
Hoynes, William. 1994. Public Television for Sale: Media, the Market and the Public Sphere. Boulder, CO: Westview Press
Jefferson, Gail. 1974. Error correction as an interactional resource. Language in Society, 2: 181–99
Jefferson, Gail. 1981. The abominable “ne?”: a working paper exploring the phenomenon of post-response pursuit of response. Occasional Paper No. 6, Dept. of Sociology, University of Manchester, England
Jefferson, Gail. 1984. On stepwise transition from talk about a trouble to inappropriately next-positioned matters. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.) Structures of Social Action. Cambridge University Press, pp. 191–221
Jefferson, Gail. 1986. Colligation as a device for minimizing repair or disagreement. Paper presented at the Conference on Talk and Social Structure, University of California, Santa Barbara
Jones, Bill. 1992. Broadcasters, politicians, and the political interview. In Bill Jones and Lynton Robins (eds.) Two Decades in British Politics. Manchester University Press, pp. 53–77
Jucker, Andreas. 1986. News Interviews: A Pragmalinguistic Analysis. Amsterdam: John Benjamins
Kernell, Samuel. 1986. Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leadership. Washington DC: Congressional Quarterly, Inc
Koppel, Ted and Kyle Gibson. 1996. Nightline: History in the Making and the Making of Television. New York: Times Books
Kotthoff, Helga. 1993. Disagreement and concession in disputes: on the context sensitivity of preference structures. Language in Society, 22: 193–216
Kumar, Krishnan. 1975. Holding the middle ground: the BBC, the public and the professional broadcaster. Sociology, 9: 67–88
Labov, William and David Fanshel. 1977. Therapeutic Discourse: Psychotherapy as Conversation. New York: Academic Press
Levinson, Stephen C. 1983. Pragmatics. Cambridge University Press
Levinson, Stephen C. 1988. Putting linguistics on a proper footing: explorations in Goffman's concepts of participation. In Paul Drew and Anthony J. Wootton (eds.) Goffman: An Interdisciplinary Appreciation. Oxford: Polity Press, pp. 161–227
Macaulay, Marcia. 1996. Asking to ask: the strategic function of indirect requests for information in news interviews. Pragmatics, 6 (4): 491–509
McCombs, M. E. and Shaw, D. L.. 1972. The agenda-setting function of the Press. Public Opinion Quarterly, 36: 176–87
MacNeil, Robert. 1982. The Right Place at the Right Time. New York: Penguin books
Matheson, Hilda. 1933. Broadcasting. London: Thornton Butterworth
Maynard, Douglas W. 1985. How children start arguments. Language in Society, 14: 1–29
Molotch, Harvey and Lester, Marilyn. 1974. News as purposive behavior: the strategic use of routine events, accidents, and scandals. American Sociological Review, 39: 101–12
Molotch, Harvey and Lester, Marilyn 1975. Accidental news: the great oil spill as local occurrence and national event. American Journal of Sociology, 81 (2): 235–60
Nevin, Bruce. 1994. Quandary/abusive questions. The LINGUIST Discussion List, 5: 754
Noelle-Neumann, Elizabeth. 1974. The spiral of silence: a theory of public opinion. Journal of Communication, 24: 24–51
Olsher, David. Forthcoming. Inviting interplay in panel format news interviews
Patterson, Thomas. 1993. Out of Order. New York: Vintage
Pomerantz, Anita M. 1980. Telling my side: “limited access” as a “fishing” device. Sociological Inquiry, 50: 104–52
Pomerantz, Anita M. 1984. Agreeing and disagreeing with assessments: some features of preferred/dispreferred turn shapes. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.) Structures of Social Action: Studies in Conversation Analysis. Cambridge University Press, pp. 57–101
Pomerantz, Anita M. 1988/9. Constructing skepticism: four devices used to engender the audience's skepticism. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 22: 293–313
Quirk, R., S. Greenbaum, G. Leech, and J. Svartvik. 1972. A Grammar of Contemporary English. London: Longman
Rather, Dan. 1994. The Camera Never Blinks Twice: The Further Adventures of a Television Journalist. New York: William Morrow and Co
Raymond, Geoffrey. 2000. The structure of responding: conforming and nonconforming responses to yes/no type interrogatives. Unpublished PhD dissertation: University of California, Los Angeles
Robinson, Jeffrey. Forthcoming. Soliciting patients' presenting concerns. In J. Heritage and D. Maynard (eds.) Practicing Medicine: Structure and Process in Primary Care Encounters. Cambridge University Press
Robinson, Michael J. and Margaret A. Sheehan. 1983. Over the Wire and on TV: CBS and UPI in Campaign '80. New York: Russell Sage
Roth, Andrew. 1996. Turn-final word repeats as a device for “doing answering” in an institutional setting. Paper presented at the Pacific Sociological Association annual meeting, Seattle, WA, April 1996
Roth, Andrew. 1998a. Who makes news: descriptions of television news interviewers' public personae. Media, Culture, and Society, 20 (1): 79–107
Roth, Andrew. 1998b. Who makes the news: social identity and the explanation of action in the broadcast news interview. Unpublished PhD dissertation: University of California, Los Angeles
Roth, Andrew and David, Olsher. 1997. Some standard uses of “what about”-prefaced questions in the broadcast news interview. Issues in Applied Linguistics, 8 (1): 3–25
Sabato, Larry. 1991. Feeding Frenzy: How Attack Journalism Has Transformed American Politics. New York: Free Press
Sacks, Harvey. 1972. On the analyzability of stories by children. In J. J. Gumperz and D. Hymes (eds.) Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, pp. 325–45
Sacks, Harvey. 1987. On the preferences for agreement and contiguity in sequences in conversation. In G. Button and J. R. E. Lee (eds.) Talk and Social Organisation. Clevedon, England: Multilingual Matters, pp. 54–69
Sacks, Harvey. 1992 [1964–72]. Lectures on Conversation, ed. G. Jefferson, 2 vols. Oxford: Blackwell
Sacks, Harvey, Emanuel, A. Schegloff, and Gail, Jefferson. 1974. A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking for conversation. Language, 50: 696–735
Sacks, Harvey and Emanuel A. Schegloff. 1979. Two preferences in the organization of reference to persons and their interaction. In G. Psathas (ed.) Everyday Language: Studies in Ethnomethodology. New York: Irvington Publishers, pp. 15–21
Scannell, Paddy. 1991. Introduction: the relevance of talk. In Paddy Scannell (ed.) Broadcast Talk. London: Sage, pp. 1–13
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1968. Sequencing in conversational openings. American Anthropologist, 70: 1075–95
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1972. Notes on a conversational practice: formulating place. In D. Sudnow (ed.) Studies in Social Interaction. New York: Free Press, pp. 75–119
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1980. Preliminaries to preliminaries: “can I ask you a question.”Sociological Inquiry, 50: 104–52
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1982. Discourse as an interactional achievement: some uses of “uh huh” and other things that come between sentences. In D. Tannen (ed.) Analyzing Discourse (Georgetown University Roundtable on Languages and Linguistics 1981). Washington DC: Georgetown University Press, pp. 71–93
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1984. On some questions and ambiguities in conversation. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.) Structures of Social Action. Cambridge University Press, pp. 28–52
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1986. The routine as achievement. Human Studies, 9: 111–51
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1987. Between macro and micro: contexts and other connections. In J. Alexander, R. M. B. Giesen, and N. Smelser (eds.) The Micro-Macro Link. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 207–34
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1988. On an actual virtual servo-mechanism for guessing bad news: a single case conjecture. Social Problems, 35 (4): 442–57
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1988/89. From interview to confrontation: observations on the Bush/Rather encounter. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 22: 215–40
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1991. Reflections on talk and social structure. In D. Boden and D. H. Zimmerman (eds.) Talk and Social Structure. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 44–70
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1992a. Introduction. In Harvey Sacks, Lectures on Conversation, ed. G. Jefferson, vol. I (Fall 1964–Spring 1968). Oxford: Blackwell, pp. ⅸ–1 ⅻ
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1992b. On talk and its institutional occasions. In P. Drew and J. Heritage, (eds.) Talk at Work: Social Interaction in Institutional Settings. Cambridge University Press, pp. 101–34
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1993. Reflections on quantification in the study of conversation. Research on Language and Social Interaction, 26: 99–128
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1996. Confirming allusions. American Journal of Sociology, 102 (1): 161–216
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1998. Word repeats as a practice for ending. Paper presented at the National Communication Association annual meetings, New York, November 1988
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1999. Discourse pragmatics, conversation analysis. Discourse Studies, 1 (4): 405–35
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 2000. On granularity. Annual Review of Sociology, 26: 715–20
Schegloff, Emanuel A. and Harvey, Sacks. 1973. Opening up closings. Semiotica, 8: 289–327
Schegloff, Emanuel A., Gail, Jefferson, and Harvey, Sacks. 1977. The preference for self-correction in the organization of repair in conversation. Language, 53: 361–82
Schiffrin, Debra. 1987. Discourse Markers. Cambridge University Press
Schlesinger, Philip. 1978. Putting “Reality” Together: BBC News. London: Constable
Schlesinger, Philip, Graham Murdock, and Philip Elliott. 1983. Televising “Terrorism”: Political Violence in Popular Culture. London: Comedia
Schudson, Michael. 1978. Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers. New York: Basic Books
Schudson, Michael. 1982. The politics of narrative form: the emergence of news conventions in print and television. Daedalus. 111: 97–113
Schudson, Michael. 1994. Question authority: a history of the news interview in American journalism, 1830s–1930s. Media, Culture and Society, 16: 565–87
Schudson, Michael. 1995. Watergate and the press. In Schudson, The Power of News. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
Schudson, Michael. 1996. The sociology of news production revisited. In J. Curran and M. Gurevitch (eds.) Mass Media and Society. London: Arnold
Schudson, Michael and Elliott King. 1995. The illusion of Ronald Reagan's popularity. In Theodore Glasser and Charles Salmon (eds.) Public Opinion and the Communication of Consent. New York: Guilford Press
Shoemaker, Pamela J. and Stephen D. Reese. 1996. Mediating the Message: Theories of Influences on Mass Media Content. Second edition. White Plains: Longman
Sigal, Leon V. 1973. Reporters and Officials. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books
Smith, Carolyn. 1990. Presidential Press Conferences: A Critical Approach. New York: Praeger
Smith, Dorothy. 1978. K is mentally ill: the anatomy of a factual account. Sociology, 12 (1): 23–53
Stengel, Richard. 1988. “Bushwhacked!”Time, 131 (6): 16–20
Summerskill, Ben. 1998. Paxman wins award for Howard showdown. The Evening Standard (London), 15 May: sec. 1, p. 4
Tannen, Deborah. 1998. The Argument Culture: Stopping America's War of Words. New York: Ballantine Books
ten Have, Paul. 1999. Doing Conversation Analysis. Thousand Oaks: Sage
Toner, Robin. 1988. Poll finds Rather clash is failing to ease Bush's Iran-Contra woes, New York Times, 2 Feb: sec. A, p. 1
Tracey, Michael. 1977. The Production of Political Television. London: Routledge
Tuchman, Gaye. 1972. Objectivity as strategic ritual: an examination of newsmen's notions of objectivity. American Journal of Sociology, 77: 660–79
Tuchman, Gaye. 1978. Making News: A Study in the Construction of Reality. New York: Free Press
Tuchman, Gaye. 1988. Mass media institutions. In Neil J. Smelser (ed.) Handbook of Sociology. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 601–26
Tunstall, Jeremy. 1971. Journalists at Work: Specialist Correspondents, Their News Organizations, News Sources, and Competitor–Colleagues. London: Constable
van Dijk, Teun. 1988. News as Discourse. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Waisbord, Silvio. 2000. Watchdog Journalism in South America. New York: Columbia University Press
Weaver, David H. and G. Cleveland Wilhoit. 1986; second edition 1991. The American Journalist: A Portrait of US News People and Their Work. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press
Weaver, Paul. 1975. Newspaper news and television news. In Douglas Cater and Richard Adler (eds.) Television as a Social Force. New York: Praeger
Weber, Max. [1910] 1976. Towards a sociology of the press. Journal of Communication, 26 (3): 96–101
Wedell, E. G. 1968. Broadcasting and Public Policy. London: Michael Joseph
Weintraub, Bernard. 1988. Rather's role a matter of debate. New York Times, 11 Oct.: sec. A, p. 29
Whale, John. 1977. The Politics of the Media. London: Fontana
Whalen, Marilyn and Don, H. Zimmerman. 1987. Sequential and institutional contexts in calls for help. Social Psychology Quarterly, 50: 172–85
Wilson, John. 1990. Politically Speaking: The Pragmatic Analysis of Political Language. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Wilson, Thomas P. 1991. Social structure and the sequential organization of interaction. In D. Boden and D. Zimmerman (eds.) Talk and Social Structure. Cambridge: Polity Press, pp. 22–43
Wyndham Goldie, Grace. 1977. Facing the Nation: Television and Politics 1936–1976. London: Bodley Head
Zaller, John. Forthcoming. A Theory of Media Politics: How the Interests of Politicians, Journalists and Citizens Shape the News. University of Chicago Press
Zelizer, Barbie. 1990. Where is the author in American TV news? On the construction and presentation of proximity, authorship, and journalistic authority. Semiotica, 80: 37–48
Zimmerman, Don H. 1988. On conversation: the conversation analytic perspective. In James A. Anderson (ed.) vol. II, Communication Yearbook, Newbury Park, CA: Sage, pp. 406–32
Zimmerman, Don H. and Deidre Boden. 1991. Structure-in-action: an introduction. In D. Boden and D. Zimmerman (eds.) Talk and Social Structure. Berkeley: University of California Press

Metrics

Altmetric attention score

Full text views

Total number of HTML views: 0
Total number of PDF views: 0 *
Loading metrics...

Book summary page views

Total views: 0 *
Loading metrics...

* Views captured on Cambridge Core between #date#. This data will be updated every 24 hours.

Usage data cannot currently be displayed.