TY - JOUR
T1 - WikiLeaks comments
T2 - A study of responses to articles
AU - Aharony, Noa
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2012 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Purpose - The study aims to explore WikiLeaks' worldwide impact amongst readers of three online newspapers, as expressed through reader comments. There are three primary research questions: are there differences between the three online newspapers concerning the factual information in the comments, the linguistic characteristics of the comments, and the rhetorical and style elements of the comments? Design/methodology/approach - The study focused on three online newspapers: The New York Times in the USA, The Guardian in the UK and Ynet in Israel, all popular channels of communication in their countries. The researcher examined the comments relating to WikiLeaks and conducted a content analysis on a sample of the comments. Findings - The main findings suggest that most of the comments were written in an emotional style and with pathos. However there are major differences between comments written to The New York Times and to Ynet. Research limitations/implications - This research is limited by the extent to which it can be generalised, as it focuses only on WikiLeaks comments written before 1 December 2010. Originality/value - This paper is the first known exhaustive study that concentrates on WikiLeaks comments. The research findings may encourage further exploration into the nature of the relationship between media texts and reactions to them.
AB - Purpose - The study aims to explore WikiLeaks' worldwide impact amongst readers of three online newspapers, as expressed through reader comments. There are three primary research questions: are there differences between the three online newspapers concerning the factual information in the comments, the linguistic characteristics of the comments, and the rhetorical and style elements of the comments? Design/methodology/approach - The study focused on three online newspapers: The New York Times in the USA, The Guardian in the UK and Ynet in Israel, all popular channels of communication in their countries. The researcher examined the comments relating to WikiLeaks and conducted a content analysis on a sample of the comments. Findings - The main findings suggest that most of the comments were written in an emotional style and with pathos. However there are major differences between comments written to The New York Times and to Ynet. Research limitations/implications - This research is limited by the extent to which it can be generalised, as it focuses only on WikiLeaks comments written before 1 December 2010. Originality/value - This paper is the first known exhaustive study that concentrates on WikiLeaks comments. The research findings may encourage further exploration into the nature of the relationship between media texts and reactions to them.
KW - Newspapers
KW - Qualitative investigation
KW - The Guardian
KW - The New York Times
KW - Web sites
KW - WikiLeaks
KW - Ynet
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84870278649&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/14684521211287927
DO - 10.1108/14684521211287927
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SN - 1468-4527
VL - 36
SP - 828
EP - 845
JO - Online Information Review
JF - Online Information Review
IS - 6
ER -