Sample reading lists

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Sample List 1
METHODOLOGY – Discourse analysis, critical/cultural
“The Archaeology of Knowledge and the Discourse on Language, trans. A. M. SheridanSmith,” 1972 - Michel Foucault
“Discourse and social life: Chapter 10: Dialogue in the public sphere: - Norman
Fairclough
“Discourse studies” Chapter 5, Gender in Discourse -Candace West, Michelle M. Lazar
and Cheris Kramarae
Chapter 2, Discourse pragmatics - Shoshana Blum-Kulka
The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Chapter 19, Discourse and Racism - Ruth Wodak
and Martin Reisigl
Chapter 28, Discourse and gender - Shari Kendall and Deborah Tannen
Narrative, Content and Semiotic Analysis - Fontana & Frey
The Interdisciplinary Study of News as Discourse - Teun Van Dijk
Terrorism and the Politics of Fear - Altheide
Crtiteria for Assessing Interpretive Validity in Qualitative Research - Altheide & Johnson
(1998)
“The Art and Politics of Interpretation” in Collecting and Interpreting Qualitative
Materials - Denzin (1998)
The Field of Foucaultian Discourse Analysis: Structures, Developments and Perspectives
Rainer Diaz-Bone, Andrea D. Buhrmann, Encarnación Gutiérrez Rodríguez, Werner
Schneider, Gavin Kendall & Francisco Tirado
Willful Virgins - Marilyn Frye
Sample List 2
Methods – Experimental Design
Bausell, R. Barker. (1994). Conducting meaningful experiments: 40 steps to
becoming a scientist. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.
Campbell, D. T., & Stanley, J. C. (1966). Experimental and quasi-experimental designs
for research. Chicago: R. McNally.
Stevens, J. P. (2007). Intermediate statistics: A modern approach (3rd ed.). New York:
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Coleman, R. (2003). Race and ethical reasoning: The importance of race to
journalistic decision making. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly,
89(2), 295-310.
Coleman, R. (2006). The effects of visuals on ethical reasoning: What's a photograph
worth to journalists making moral decisions? . Journalism and Mass
Communication Quarterly, 83(4), 835-850.
Culbertson, H. M.(1974). Visual detail, sensationalism and perceived writer stand.
Journalism Quarterly, 51(1), 79-86.
Culbertson, H. M. (1974). Words vs. pictures: Perceived impact and connotative
meaning. Journalism Quarterly, 51(2), 226-237.
Domke, D., Perlmutter, D., & Spratt, M. (2002). The primes of our times? An
examination of the 'power' of visual images. Journalism, 3(2), 131-159.
Dyck, E. J., & Coldevin, G. (1992). Using positive vs. negative photographs for thirdworld fund raising. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 69(3),
572-579.
Gibson, R., & Zillmann, D. (2000). Reading between the photographs: The influence
of incidental pictorial information on issue perception. Journalism and Mass
Communication Quarterly, 77(2), 355-366.
Gilbert, K., & Schleuder, J. (1990). Effects of color and complexity in still photographs
on mental effort and memory. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly,
67(4), 749-756.
Huh, H.-J. L. (1994). The effect of newspaper picture size. Visual Communication
Quarterly, 1(2), 14-16.
Kiousis, S., Bantimaroudis, P., & Ban, H. (1999). Candidate image attributes:
Experiments on the substantive dimension of second level agenda setting.
Communication Research, 26(4), 414-428.
Lain, L. B., & Harwood, P. J. (1992). Mug shots and reader attitudes toward people in
the news. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 69(2), 293-300.
Mayer, R. E., & Massa, L. J. (2003). Three facets of visual and verbal learners:
Cognitive ability, cognitive style, and learning preference. Journal of
Educational Psychology, 95(4), 833-846.
Pfau, M., Haigh, M., Fifrick, A., Holl, D., Tedesco, A., Cope, J., et al. (2006). The effects
of print news photographs of the causalties of war. Journalism and Mass
Communication Quarterly, 83(1), 150-168.
Rill, L. A., & Davis, C. B. (2008). Testing the Second Level of Agenda Setting: Effects of
news frames on reader-assigned attributes of Hezbollah and Israel in the
2006 War in Lebanon. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 85(3),
609-624.
Sundar, S. S. (2000). Multimedia effects on processing and perception of online
news: A study of picture, audio, and video downloads. Journalism and Mass
Communication Quarterly, 77(3), 480-499.
Wanta, W. (1988). The effects of dominant photographs: An agenda-setting
experiment. Journalism Quarterly, 65(1), 107-111.
Zillmann, D., Gibson, R., & Sargent, S. L. (1999). Effects of photographs in newsmagazine reports on issue perception. Media Psychology, 1(3), 207-228.
Sample List 3
MIXED METHODS
1) Janesick, V.J . (1994). The dance of qualitative research design. In Denzin, N.K. and
Lincoln, Y.
S. (eds). Handbook of qualitative research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 209-219.
2) Lindlof, T. R., & Taylor, B. C. (2002). Qualitative communication research methods
(2nd ed.).
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
3) Potter, W. James (1996) An Analysis of Thinking and Research About Qualitative
Methods.
Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
4) Bryman, A. (2007). Barriers to integrating quantitative and qualitative research.
Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(1), 8-22.
5) Denscombe, M. (2008). Communities of practice: A research paradigm for the
mixed
methods approach. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2(3), 270-283.
6) Onwuegbuzie, A. J., & Leech, N. L. (2004). Enhancing the interpretation
of 'significant' findings: The role of mixed methods research. The Qualitative
Report, 9(4), 770-792.
7) Morgan, D. L. (2007). Paradigms lost and pragmatism regained: Methodological
implications of combining qualitative and quantitative methods. Journal of Mixed
Methods Research, 1(1), 48-76.
8) Dillman, D.A., Phelps, G., Tortora, R., Swift, K., Kohrell, J., Berck, J., & Messer, B. L.
(2009). Response rate and measurement differences in mixed-mode surveys using
mail, telephone, interactive voice response (IVR) and the Internet. Social Science
Research, 28, 1-18.
9) Groves, R., & Peytcheva, E. (2008). The impact of nonresponse rates on
nonresponse
bias: A metanalysis. Public Opinion Quarterly, 72(2), 167-189.
10) Petrolia, D. & Bhattacharjee. S. (2009). Revisiting incentive effects: Evidence
from
a random sample mail survey on consumer preferences for fuel ethanol. Public
Opinion Quarterly, 73(3), 537-550.
11) Greelaw, C., & Brown-Welty, S. (2009). A comparison of web-based and paperbased
survey methods: Testing assumptions of survey mode and response cost. Evaluation
Review, 33(5), 464-480.
12) Peytchev, A., Baxter, R. K., & Carley-Baxter, L. R. (2009). Not all survey effort is
equal:
Reduction of nonresponse bias and nonresponse error. Public Opinion Quarterly,
73(4), 785-806.
13) Hopf, C. (2004). Qualitative interviews: an overview. In U. Flick, E. von Kardorff
& I.
Steinke (Eds.), A companion to qualitative research (pp. 203-208). London: Sage.
14) Merton, R. K., Fiske, M., & Kendall, P. L. (1990). The focused interview: A manual
of
problems and procedures (2nd ed.). Free Press.
15) Kvale, S. (1996). The social construction of validity. In Interviews: An
introduction to
qualitative research interviewing (pp. 229-252). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
16) Kvale, S. (1996). The interview as conversation. In Interviews: An introduction
to
qualitative research interviewing (pp. 19-37). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
17) Kvale, S. (1996). Thematizing and designing an interview study. In Interviews:
An
introduction to qualitative research interviewing (pp. 83-108). Thousand Oaks, CA:
Sage.
18) Meho, L. I. (2006). E-mail interviewing in qualitative research: A methodological
discussion. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology,
57(10), 1284-1295.
19) Schaeffer, N. C. & Press, S. (2003).The science of asking questions. Annual
Review of
Sociology, 29, 65-88.
Sample List 4
Methods (Qualitative vs. Quantitative)
Becker, H. (1997). Tricks of the trade: How to think about your research while you’re
doing it. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Cha, M., Haddadi, H., Benevenuto, F., & Gummadi, K. P. (2010). Measuring User
Influence in Twitter: The Million Follower Fallacy. Proceedings of the Fourth
International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media, 10-17.
Delli Carpini, M., & Keeter, S. (1993). Measuring political knowledge: Putting first
things first. American Journal of Political Science, 37(4), 1179-1206.
Poindexter, P. M., & McCombs, M.E. (2000). Research in mass communication: A
practical guide. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's.
Potter, W. J. (1996). An analysis of thinking and research about qualitative methods.
_Mahwah NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Prior, M. (2009). The immensely inflated news audience: Assessing bias in self‐
reported news exposure. Public Opinion Quarterly, 73(1), 130‐143.
Project for Excellence in Journalism. (2010). How news happens: A study of the
news ecosystem of one American city,
http://www.journalism.org/analysis_report/how_news_happens
Reese, S., Rutigliano, L., Hyun, K., & Jeung, N. (2007). Mapping the blogosphere:
Professional and citizen-based media in the global news arena. Journalism
8(3): 235-261.
Slater, M. D. (2004). Operationalizing and analyzing exposure: The foundation of
media effects research. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 81(1),
168‐183.
Tremayne, M. (2004). The Web Of Context: Applying Network Theory To The Use Of
Hyperlinks In Journalism On The Web Journalism & Mass Communication
Quarterly, 81(2), 237-253.
van Dijk, T.A. (1983). Discourse analysis: Its development and application to the
structure of news. Journal of Communication 33(2), 20-43.
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