Preface to the Fifth Edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Round Up the Usual Suspects
Applying the Focal Points Model to Media
How I Became a Man Without Quantities
Data Man Versus Data-Free Man
Kinds of Questions Researchers Ask
Conclusions of a Man Without Quantities, Who Is Also a Practicing Theoretician
Introduction: Applications and Exercises
PART I. GETTING STARTED
1. What Is Research?
We All Do Research, All the Time
Scholarly Research Is Different From Everyday Research
Cultural Studies and Research
Nietzsche on Interpretation
Diachronic and Synchronic Research
The Way the Human Mind Works
Overt and Covert Oppositions
Quantity and Quality in Media Research
Why a Book That Teaches Both Methodologies?
Considering Research Topics
What Is Research? Applications and Exercises
2. The Research Process
Critical Thinking as Defined by the National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking, 1987
Doing a Literature Review
Primary and Secondary Research Sources
Searching on the Internet (or “Find the Info If You Can!”)
Using the Internet to Conduct Research
Analyzing Methodology in Research Articles
The Research Process: Applications and Exercises
PART II. METHODS OF TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
3. Semiotic Analysis
Saussure’s Division of Signs Into Signifiers and Signifieds
Peirce’s Trichotomy: Icon, Index, and Symbol
Michel Foucault on Codes and Cultural Change
Marcel Danesi on Codes and Culture
Clotaire Rapaille on Culture Codes
Semiotics in Society: A Reprise
Syntagmatic Analysis of Texts
Paradigmatic Analysis of Texts
Applications of Semiotic Theory
Paul Ekman on Facial Expression
Semiotics: Applications and Exercises
4. Rhetorical Analysis
Rhetoric and the Mass Media
A Brief Note on the Communication Process
Certeau on Subversions by Readers and Viewers
Applied Rhetorical Analysis
A Miniglossary of Common Rhetorical Devices
Other Considerations When Making Rhetorical Analyses
A Sample Rhetorical Analysis: A La Mer Advertisement
Rhetorical Analysis of the Visual Image
Images in Narrative Texts
Gangsta Rap and American Popular Culture
Rhetorical Analysis: Applications and Exercises
5. Ideological Criticism
Mannheim’s Ideology and Utopia
Roland Barthes on Mythologies
The Base and the Superstructure, False Consciousness, and the “Self-Made Man and Woman”
Post-Soviet Marxist Criticism
Basic Ideas in Marxist Criticism
A Marxist Interpretation of the Fidji “Snake” Advertisement
Feminist Criticism of Media and Communication
The Social Conception of Knowledge
Phallocentric Theory: The Physical Basis of Male Domination
Political Cultures, the Media, and Communication
Pop Cultural and Media Preferences of the Four Political Cultures
Marxist Perspectives on Social Media
A Preview of Critical Discourse Analysis
Ideological Criticism: Applications and Exercises
6. Psychoanalytic Criticism
Smartphones and the Psyche: Applying the Theories of Erik Erikson
Neuropsychoanalysis: Freud and Neuroscience
Psychoanalytic Criticism: Applications and Exercises
7. Discourse Analysis
Defining Discourse Analysis
Teun A. van Dijk on Discourse Analysis
Spoken and Written Discourse
Styles and Written Discourse
Political Ideologies and Discourse Analysis
Critical Discourse Analysis
Advertising and Critical Discourse Analysis
Multimodal Discourse Analysis
Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis
Fashion and Discourse Analysis
A Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis of an Advertisement
Discourse Analysis: Applications and Exercises
PART III. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS
8. Interviews
The Prisoner Interviews Number Two
Four Kinds of Research Interviews
Questions Investigative Reporters Ask
The Structure of Conversations and Interviews
Transcribing Recorded Interviews
Making Sense of Transcribed Interviews
Problems With Interview Material
Interviews: Applications and Exercises
9. Historical Analysis
History as Metadiscipline or Specialized Subject
Is History Objective, Subjective, or a Combination of the Two?
The Importance of Fernand Braudel
Kinds of Historical Research
The Problem of Writing History
Baudrillard and Jameson on Postmodernism
Postmodernism and Historiography
The Historical and the Comparative Approach
History Is an Art, Not a Science
Doing Historical Research
Historical Analysis: Applications and Exercises
10. Ethnomethodological Research
Defining Ethnomethodology
Garfinkel’s Ingenious and Mischievous Research
Norbert Wiley’s Interesting Perspective on Harold Garfinkel
Using Ethnomethodology in Media and Communication Research
Humorists as Code Violators
Ethnomethodology and the Communication Process
Ethnomethodological Research: Applications and Exercises
11. Participant Observation
Defining Participant Observation
Significant Considerations When Doing Participant Observation
A Case Study of Participant Observation: Readers of Romance Novels
Problems With Participant Observation
Benefits of Participant Observation Studies
Making Sense of Your Findings
Writing Up a Participant Observation Study
Ethics and Research Involving Humans
Participant Observation: Applications and Exercises
PART IV. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS
12. Content Analysis
Defining Content Analysis
Why We Make Content Analyses
Methodological Aspects of Content Analysis
Advantages of Content Analysis as a Research Method
Difficulties in Making Content Analyses
Content Analysis Step-By-Step
Content Analysis: Applications and Exercises
A Cautionary Note From Denis McQuail
13. Surveys
Kinds of Surveys: Descriptive and Analytic
Methods of Data Collection
Advantages of Survey Research
Surveys and the 2012 Presidential Election
Surveys and the 2016 Presidential Election
A Note on Media Usage Surveys: Shares and Ratings
Open-Ended and Closed-Ended Survey Questions
Making Pilot Studies to Pretest Surveys
Conducting Online Surveys
Evaluating Survey Accuracy
Surveys: Applications and Exercises
14. Experiments
The Structure of an Experiment
Advantages of Experiments
Disadvantages of Experiments
The “Black Rats” Case and Experimental Fraud
A Checklist on Experimental Design
What’s an Experiment and What Isn’t?
Ethics and the Facebook Experiment
Experiments: Applications and Exercises
15. A Primer on Descriptive Statistics
Measures of Central Tendency
The Normal or Bell-Shaped Curve
A Cautionary Note on Statistics
Using Statistics to Support a Claim
Statistics and Comparisons
Data on Media Use in America
The Problem of Interpretation
Statistics and Problems Caused by Definitions
Statistics: Applications and Exercises
PART V. PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
16. Nineteen Common Thinking Errors
17. Writing Research Reports
A Trick for Organizing Reports
Outlines, First Drafts, and Revisions
The IMRD Structure of Quantitative Research Reports
Writing Correctly: Avoiding Some Common Problems
A Checklist for Planning Research and Writing Reports
Glossary
References
Name Index
Subject Index
About the Author