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Manufacturing Concern:

Chapter Three: Quantitative and Qualitative Results

Jim Boyce

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Summary Article

 

 

 

In this chapter, I examine the amount and type of headline coverage given to male and female victims of violence. I begin by analyzing the number of headlines found in each of the groups and sub-groups defined in the previous chapter. I then examine the content of the headlines, comparing and contrasting those emphasizing male victims with those emphasizing female victims, and paying special attention to coverage of the “Montreal Massacre” and its anniversaries. Because of their significant role in news, I finish by describing the types of sources found in headlines.

 

Quantitative Results

The following chart shows the number of headlines found in each of the groups defined in the last chapter:

 

 

Number of

Headlines

Percentage

of Coverage

Gender-Specific

 

 

1.Literal

406

32.7

2.Contextual

134

10.8

 

540

43.5

Non Gender-Specific

 

 

3.Connotative

169

13.6

4.Neutral

364

29.3

5.Other

169

13.6

 

702

56.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Forty-four per cent (540 of 1242) of the headlines contain direct references to the gender of victims. Three-quarters of these are literal (406 of 540) and one-quarter are contextual (134 of 540). Most of the remaining headlines were classified as neutral (364 or 29.3 per cent) followed by connotative and other headlines (both at 169 or 13.6 per cent).

 

We can assess coverage of male and female victims by examining the 540 direct references to gender in more detail. As in the last chapter, I have distinguished two types of headlines for each group based on how strongly they refer to gender and violence:

 

 

 

Number of

Headlines

Per Cent of

Headlines

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women - Men

Women - Men

Literal

Type One

325- 11

96.7 - 3.3

 

Type Two

67 - 03

95.7  - 4.3

Contextual

Type One

90 - 01

98.9 - 1.1

 

Type Two

43 - 00

100.0    - 0.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

525 - 15

97.2 - 2.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We find that women are emphasized in 97.2 per cent of the direct references to gender while men are emphasized in 2.8 per cent, a ratio of 35 to one. This emphasis is found in all four types. A majority of these, 427 or 79.1 per cent, are of the first type in each group and are, by definition, the most direct references in the sample. In short, there is an overwhelming emphasis on women in headlines which identify the victims’ gender.

Headlines making direct references to gender constitute 43.5 per cent of the sample leaving 56.5 per cent of it unaccounted for. It would be a mistake to suggest that readers envision male victims when reading about victims in general. For example, connotative headlines -- which refer to sexual and family violence -- contain strong hints of a link to gender. When we consider headlines which directly identify gender, we find that women are emphasized in all cases of sexual violence and the vast majority of cases of family violence, and this raises the question of whether literally neutral headlines imply a similar emphasis. There are additional reasons for thinking that connotative headlines emphasize gender. To begin with, they include references to women, men, equality, cheerleaders and a frat-member, although they did not fall within the strict definition of a literal reference to gender. Furthermore, one quarter of the references to family violence and half of those to sexual violence were categorized by CNI as Battered Women or Violence Against Women. Similarities between the headlines from these two categories and the category Family Violence suggest that terms like “family violence” and “wife abuse” are used interchangeably. Finally, the bracketed information provided by CNI shows that some literally-neutral headlines accompany articles focused on gender. For example, “Family violence: ‘It always happens again’ [Men who beat women]” (92.05.08 VS.C 1). To test this evidence, I examined every fourth article from the connotative group.

In deciding if an article focused on gender, I considered the headline, text, photographs and graphics. I did not consider neighbouring articles, articles on nearby pages or previous coverage of an issue or event. I took into account the “inverted pyramid” format of most newspaper articles, reporters presenting information in what they believe is its order of importance. The question I asked of each article was: does it, as its main theme, or as one of several key themes, concern the victimization of men, women or neither?

Given this, I did not include articles which mentioned women or men in a secondary way or which focused on both to roughly an equal degree. An article on murder in the United States that identified young, black men as the likeliest victims (“Murderous marks topped: Violence blamed on guns, drugs and poverty” 91.01.29 VS.A3) or one on domestic violence that paraphrased someone saying that “many pastors... believe that an abused woman should be told to forgive her partner and go home” (“Mennonites aid abuse victims” 91.08.03 CH.B7) were not included because the connection to gender was established late in the article. Also omitted were articles which emphasized men and women to roughly equal degrees, such as one citing several cases of victimization (“Worst felons face tougher parole rules: bill gives crime victims voice in offenders’ release” 91.10.09 GM.A 1,10), though it is worth noting that in the majority of these cases, the emphasis tended to be towards women.

The results of my sampling are as follows:30

 

 

Number

# Emphasizing

 

Sampled

Women

Men

Sexual Violence

06

04

00

Family Violence

36

29

00

 

 

 

 

 

42

33

00

 

 

 

 

 

Seventy-nine per cent of connotative headlines emphasize women as victims. None emphasize men. This provides strong evidence for the hypothesis that terms like wife abuse and family violence are used interchangeably to refer to women as victims, and reinforces the emphasis on women found in the contextual and literal groups.

This leaves the fourth and fifth group -- neutral and other headlines -- which represent 42.9 per cent of the sample. In chapter two, I described some reasons for suspecting an emphasis on gender in some of these headlines. Some contained literal hints, such as references to men, women, women’s groups, feminists, equality, receptionists and cabbies. Others were contextual references, although at a municipal or provincial, rather than a national, level. For example, a person who had read previous articles about Toronto city councillor Kay Gardner’s questioning of statistics on violence against women could easily associate the headline “Gardner issues apology for remark on violence” (90.10.02 TS.A24) with gender. Finally, we found that CNI categorized 18 per cent (60 of 322) of neutral headlines and 55 per cent of other headlines (94 or 172) as Battered Women or Violence Against Women, and provided additional bracketed information on the headlines which identified the gender of victims, such as “Judges need more training NWT women maintain [controversial ruling in a wife assault case]” (90.07.19 MG.B7). To test this apparent emphasis on women, I examined every fourth neutral and other headline. The results follow:31

 

 

Total #

# Specifying

 

Sampled

Women

Men

Neutral References

86

42

01

Other References

41

33

00

 

 

 

 

 

127

75

01

 

 

 

 

 

Based on these figures, approximately fifty per cent of neutral references and eighty per cent of other references emphasize women as victims. Less than one per cent of the combined groups emphasize men. Of those headlines specifying gender, 98.7 per cent emphasize women and 1.3 emphasize men, a ratio of 75 to one. These results suggest that many literally gender-neutral headlines accompany articles with a gender-specific focus which is virtually always women.

Using our sampling of these three groups we can estimate the number of articles that emphasize women or men and, combined with the number of headlines from our literal and contextual groups, get a broader sense of the coverage provided in our sample. The results are as follows:

 

 

Number of

# of Articles

% of Articles

 

Articles

Women

Men

Women

Men

1. Literal

406

392

14

96.6

3.4

2. Contextual

134

133

01

99.3

0.7

3. Connotative

169

133

00

100.0

0.0

4. Neutral

364

178

04

97.8

2.2

5. Other

169

136

00

100.0

0.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1242

972

19

98.1

1.9

Using the projections from our sampling, we find that eighty per cent of the headlines contain references to gender (991 of 1242). Of these, 98 percent emphasize women as victims and two per cent emphasize men, a ratio of 51 to one. Rather than negating our initial finding that coverage overwhelmingly emphasizes women, this sampling widens the coverage gap between women and men by almost an additional 50 per cent. The only group where less than 75 per cent of headlines refer to gender is the neutral group but, even here, they amount to half of the references.

This provides us with two quantitative measurements of media coverage of male and female victims. One is the amount of coverage revealed by the first two groups, literal and contextual headlines, which were strictly defined to minimize the potential of including non-gender-specific headlines. The second includes the results of sampling of the remaining headlines in an effort to test for an additional focus on gender. It suggests that the gap in coverage of men and women is greater than originally discovered and, at the least, confirms those original findings. In both cases, I have been careful not to over-estimate the focus on gender. In fact, the gap in coverage between men and women is most likely greater than shown so far.

 

Qualitative Results

We have already seen that most headlines in our sample emphasize women. In this section, I will examine the content of headlines, comparing and contrasting those concerning women and men.

As there are so few headlines emphasizing men, it is convenient to list them here (the first fourteen are taken from the literal group, the last one from the contextual group):

1.      “Young males likeliest crime victims, study finds” (89.10.13 MG.A3);

2.      “Single males in the West most likely crime victims” (90.04.25 CH.B1);

3.      “Woman’s sentence suspended in husband’s stabbing death” (90.05.10 VS.A12);

4.      “Wife regrets staying with man she killed” (90.05.11 TS.A1,1 1);

5.      “Family violence affects men too: researcher says women often initiate ugly cycle” (91.05.04 CH.B2);

6.      “Real story behind call by feminist to ‘kill men”’(91.05.21 TS.Cl);

7.      “Hubby bashing found equal to wife abuse” (91.06.19 WFP.A27);

8.      “Male abuse victims want to talk: men hope to add their voices to the national debate on violence against women so that their own cries of pain can be heard”(91.12.04 GM.A);

9.      “Husband-killer’s death a suicide” (92.06.09 VS.A4);

10.  “39% of women in survey admit they abuse spouse” (92.10.23 TS.A18);

11.  “Females batter men, study says” (92.10.23 CH.B7);

12.  “Many women admit abusing mates, poil says” (92.10.23 VS.A3);

13.  “More women than men admit abuse, study finds” (92.10.23 WFP.A3);

14.  “Women may be equal partners in spousal abuse” (92.10.23 HCH.D16);

15.  “The men in the middle: confused over what their role is, they meekly obeyed a gunman” (91.12.06 VS.A 19).

Eight of the headlines present quantitative information, finding that wives batter or admit battering husbands (10, 12), that this battering may be equal (7, 14) or exceed (13) that of women, and that men are more likely to be victims of general violence (1, 2). The other seven headlines refer to individual cases of victimization (3, 4, 6, 9, 15) or victimization as a broader issue (5, 8). All but four of the headlines (1, 2, 6, 15) appear to refer to family violence.

We should be careful about drawing conclusions that all of these headlines represent an emphasis on male victims. Three articles (3, 4, 9) concern cases where battered wives murdered their husbands and another (6) concerns a comment by self-described feminist Andrea Dworkin that men who rape should be killed. In the context in which they were published, readers may have associated these headlines with the victimization of women. This would not be surprising since other headlines referring to such issues do so. 

The limited focus on male victims is even more striking when other factors are considered.  One-third of the headlines (10-14) appeared on the same day atop a Canadian Press article that was published in five newspapers.  Thus, already sparse coverage of men is concentrated on a few days out of a four-year period.  It is also notable that headlines reporting men as the most likely victims of violence emphasize other traits, namely, that they are young (1) and single (2). The number of headlines about male victimization is small to begin with but, considering these points, is still an overestimation of the attention it receives. This inattention is seen in headlines stating that men hope to “add” their voices (8) or that family violence “affects men too” (5). These are ironic considering those headlines which report men as being as likely or more likely than women to be victims of violence.32

In contrast to headlines on men, relatively few headlines quantify women’s victimization and few place that victimization in the context of men’s.  Rather, only the number of female victims is given or terms like

epidemic,” “on the rise” or “rampant” are used.  In essence, this decontextualizes violence, as the following examples reveal:

“Violence against women in Canada reaches epidemic levels” (90.02.20 HCH.A3)

“48% of murdered women killed by husbands” (92.12.05 MG.A4)

“Figures rising on violence against women” (92.08.24 CH.B5).

“1.1 million US women battered, report says” 

Part of this tendency is due to coverage of sources such as studies which deal only with women, an issue I will examine when I address sources in more detail. The end result is that women’s victimization is treated as a singular problem and is not placed in a broader context of violence affecting both women and men.

One of the few occasions where women’s victimization is made relative to men’s is a series of articles on a Statistics Canada report in 1992. I will list each headline since this is the only case where women’s suffering is explicitly emphasized as being equal to that of men (all articles appeared on November 19, 1992):

1.    Half of all violent-crime victims are women: most are attacked by men they know, Statistics Canada says” (MG.Al,2);

2.    “Women are victims often as men, study says” (VS.B3);

3.    “Women, men equal victims: Statistics Canada shows true level of violent crime” (CH.A3);

4.    “Women victims of violence as often as men” (92.11.19 HCH.A14);

5.    “Women victims of violent crime as often as men: survey contradicts other studies” (WFP.A3);

6.    “Women as likely as men to be victims of violence” (GM.Al1).

These headlines are similar in format to those suggesting husband abuse is as prevalent as wife abuse.  That women are emphasized in this way suggests that the findings are atypical. Indeed, this is stated by one headline which reports that the findings contradict past studies (5).  Ironically, another states that the study had disclosed the “true” level of violence (3). Since the statement is not attributed to a source it appears as though it is the opinion of the headline writer. At the very least, this is a loaded statement given the way the study was presented in the other headlines, and in contrast to those headlines stating that men are more likely to be victims. That these headlines contend that, at the greatest, women’s victimization is equal to that of men, raises serious questions about disparities in the amount of coverage given to each.  Furthermore, seeing that women are the vast majority of gender-specific coverage, it would seem more newsworthy that men are equal victims, given that their experience is largely ignored in the headlines.

This disparity in coverage is most pronounced in qualitative headlines, that is, headlines that emphasize the quality rather than the quantity of violence. The majority of headlines concern wife abuse or sexual violence against women but we find them amidst a wide range of issues, including the victimization of women at home, at work and in the public realm. These include individual cases of victimization and violence as a societal issue facing all women, women’s and other advocacy groups, government and privately-funded projects, shelters, legal cases and events such as the White Ribbon Campaign.  This contextualization provides readers with a rich base from which to understand women’s victimization, a context that expanded during the years being studied.

In 1989 the vast majority of headlines concerned wife abuse, whether in terms of shelters, government funding, conferences or the legal system. The exception was the December coverage of the Montreal murders.  The focus on wife abuse continued in 1990 although there were also articles on the fear of violence outside of the home, such as “Living in fear: women are afraid to go out alone: why does half the population have to put up with a restricted life?” (90.04.28 GM.D 1,8) and violence at work, such as “Alarm over workplace murders: 42% of women killed on the job site are murdered (90.12.05 CH.D8). The years 1991 and 1992 saw the greatest variety of topics concerning violence and women. Although articles on wife abuse continued to be common, more headlines appeared concerning issues such as fear (“Never at night: fear stalks Canadian women on the streets of the nation” 91.10.23 HCH.D 12), threats of violence (“Death threat sent to female editors” 91.11.07 GM.A6), violence in the media (“Province considers labelling movies for violence to women” 92.04.04 TS.A1) and the National Panel on Violence Against Women. 

This expanding context appears to correspond to an expanding use and meaning of the phrase “violence against women.” In 1989, this phrase appeared as often during December (four times), the month of the “Montreal Massacre,” as in the previous 11 months (some headlines used related terms such as “violence towards women and “violence on women”). In the first 11 months, it appears that “violence against women” refers to wife abuse and sexual violence. After it is associated with the “Montreal Massacre,” the meaning becomes less clear since that event does not fall into the scope of either of those two types of violence. By 1991, at a time when an increasing range of issues concerning violence and women are being addressed, the term appears in 30 headlines. In one case, we see it being referred to in terms of work -- “Ending workplace violence against women is handbook’s goal” (92.03.27 VS.D1) --while in most it is used in general terms -- “Violence against women key world issue” (91.10.20 MG.B2). It would appear that the term became the means through which violence could be seen not as affecting some women, such as wives, for example, but affecting all women.  Headlines state or suggest that violence against women is “systemic” and part of a “continuum.” Violence was seen in terms of equality -- “Minister links economic inequality to violence against women” (92.06.20 MG.A11) -- and culture in general -- “Experts damn violent culture: women the victims of tolerance, they say” (90.02.16 WFP.A4). Coinciding with this is an emphasis on men as victimizers. As women were portrayed as victims of a wide range of violence, men were cited as the cause: “Violence against women: Canadian men leave behind a trail of death” (91.11.30 CH.A5) and “Men must force themselves to change: violence against women just not tolerable today” (90.11.20 MG.B3).

 

The Montreal Murders

These trends are especially clear when we consider coverage of the Montreal murders and their anniversaries.

In 1989 and 1990, most references to violence against women were to wife abuse and, to a lesser extent, sexual violence. In coverage of the murders, however, we find headlines such as “Killings reveal violence against women deeply ingrained” (89.12.16 MG.B1,6), “War against women: last year’s massacre of 14 women in Montreal burst the issue of violence against women out of the closet” (90.12.01 HCH.B 1,2) and “A year later, the lesson of Montreal still unheeded” (90.12.05 HCH.A6).  In view of the nature of the Montreal murders – they were an act neither of family nor sexual violence – and the broad scope of these headlines, the term “violence against women,” associated with the murders, begins to encompass a wider range of acts. 

Even more obvious is the stress that coverage of murders places on the inter-gendered nature of violence. Eight days after the murders a headline posed the question: “Two solitudes: murders act of madman or extreme example of male attitude toward women in Canada?” (89.12.14 CH.E 1). By this point, most headlines had emphasized the latter. A division between men as victimizers and women as victims is obvious in articles such as “Slayings deal blow to gender relations, murder expert says” (89.12.11 GM.A9), and columns such as “A hatred of women thrives in our society” (89.12.08 TS.A3 1) and “Male venting of rage must change” (89.12.11 CH.A4). An unbridgeable gap between women and men is suggested in “‘Men cannot know the feelings of fear”’ (89.12.12 GM.A7). Only one headline claimed the opposite: “Slayings not part of trend, analysts say (89.12.09 MG.A3). This dichotomy between men and women continued in 1990, one headline suggesting that even the most sensitive men had difficulty understanding: “Violence done to women doesn’t fade: even caring men amazed by fear many women feel” (90.12.05 MG.B3).

In 1991 and 1992, headlines concerning the Montreal murders shared space with other violence-related issues and events. We also begin to see articles focused not on the anniversaries of the murders but related issues such as the controversy surrounding the White Ribbon campaign (“TV anchors told not to wear white ribbons” 91.12.06 GM.C1 and “Women angry over money spent by men’s white ribbon campaign” 92.12.02 VS.A 1). Other articles explored new angles, such as the men involved (“The men in the middle: confused over what their role is, they meekly obeyed a gunman” 91.12.06 VS.A19) and a questioning of the association of the murders to male violence (“Lighting a candle for 14 women: on the Montreal massacre’s second anniversary, some survivors are being challenged because they hesitate to characterize the event as indicative of sexism or male violence” 91.12.06 GM.A20). Even so, we see a continuing emphasis on the link between the murders and other types of violence suffered by women. This is seen in headlines such as “Two years after Lepine’s rampage violence against women still rages” (91.12.06 MG.A 1,8) and “Three years after Lepine women are still targets, study says” (92.12.07 VS.A4).  

As “violence against women” begins to encompass, after the Montreal murders, a wider range of acts against women, we also see an increasing focus on the relationship of women and men in general as an explanation for the suffering. Although this was previously evident in part in headlines on spousal abuse, it referred to certain types of men and women --husbands and wives. With the Montreal Massacre, men and women seem to be categorized in general, the former as victimizers, the latter as victims. This is particularly true of coverage of the Montreal murders, which is aptly described by one headline as: “Candles bear mute witness: Montreal massacre a symbol of violence against women” (91.12.06 HCH.A7).

Coverage of the Montreal murders, like coverage of women in general, is overwhelmingly qualitative. In exploring the violence facing women, it rarely quantifies women’s victimization in relationship to that of men but, instead, personalizes it and provides readers with concrete, individual examples which allow the reader to identify with the victims. Even though headlines emphasizing men report that they face a level of violence as high as that of women, there are few qualitative headlines that place their suffering into a societal context or personalize it. On the contrary, men are more likely to be identified in qualitative headlines as perpetrators of violence, serving to reinforce the focus on women’s suffering.

 

Sources

These trends in coverage of men and women are reflected in the sources we find cited in headlines. The most frequently cited are identified in terms of the legal system (judges, criminologists, police, etc.), the government (identified as individuals -- Mary Collins; positions --councillor; geographical location -- Ottawa; political parties -- Tories; or in terms of specific programs) and, among other things, a wide range of conferences, inquests, panels, papers, polls, reports, statistics, studies, surveys and task forces. Other sources include native, religious and non-profit groups, labor organizations, the media community, celebrities and a wide range of generically-identified experts, including critics, analysts, sociologists, psychologists, clinic directors, therapy groups, social workers, boards, officials, agencies, advocates and activists. Individual victims or their friends and family are also used as sources. Finally, newspapers themselves sometimes act as sources in the form of columnists and editorialists.

Sources can be identified in the headline -- “Battered women face feeling like POWs, clinic director” (90.05 .05 GM.A 10) and “Ottawa willing to move on abuse, McCrae says” (91.11.01 WFP.A5). They can also be implied, whether by the use of verbs -- “Launch blitz to stop violence against women MPs are urged” (91.02.13 MG.B4) -- or quotations -- “‘Anti-woman and anti-feminist sentiments are all around us”’ (89.12.09 MG.B 1,4). Whether identified or implied, sources are key in framing the mood of a headline. They accuse, argue, attack, blame, blast, call, cite, criticize, denounce, demand, deplore, endorse, honour, laud, pledge, praise, protest, question, vow and, above all else, urge.

It is not surprising, given our earlier findings, that many of these sources are linked to women or women’s issues. We noted some obvious examples earlier when defining the literal group (“women’s shelters”) and contextual group (“the National Panel on Violence Against Women”). Headlines make references to people associated with women’s issues such as author Betty Friedan (“Feminism blameless: Friedan” 89.12.14 CH.E1) and Status of Women Minister Judy Collins (“Changing men’s attitudes a major challenge, Collins says” 90.12.05 GM.A5), and to women’s groups (“Women’s group calls for stigma on violence” 92.02.13 VS.A4). There are additional references to a variety of sources focused on women, such as a study on battered women, the federal government’s War Against Women report, the Elizabeth Fry Society, advocates for abused women and The National Panel on Violence Against Women. In addition, individual victims are found as sources of some stories (“An abused woman’s story ‘I escaped with the children and my life”’ 92.02.21 CH.C 15).

Other references are more generic. For example, “women” are cited in cases such as “Women make passionate plea for Ottawa action: government ‘major obstacle’ in fighting violence” (90.12.12 CH.A8) and “Women rally against violence: angry marchers demand right to ‘walk the street and feel safe”’ (91.09.22 WFP.A2). Many of these headlines are similar to those citing women’s groups, the link being explicit in “Women appeal for end to violence: feminist groups blame Conservatives for inaction after massacre (90.12.12 MG.B1). Although there are several references to “men” as sources, these also tend to focus on women’s victimization. One example is “Men push to end violence: shelter funding, anti-p0rnography campaign wanted” (91.10.21 CH.A6). There are a few possible exceptions, such as “Male abuse victims want to talk: men hope to add their voices to the national debate on violence against women so that their own cries of pain can be heard” (91.12.044 GM.A1,11) and “The men in the middle: confused over what their role is, they meekly obeyed a gunman” (91.12.06 VS.A19).

There are other headlines which imply a focus on gender. Given those headlines which do emphasize women, it is reasonable to think that headlines such as “Battered ruling gets hooray: no second trial for woman” (90.05.04 CH.A1,2) and “Launch blitz to stop violence against women MPs are urged” (91.02.13 MG.B4) are based on gender-specific sources. The same can be said of headlines which contain or are direct quotes such as ‘‘Wife assault called ‘epidemic’ among South Asians” (90.11.19 GM.A8).

Finally, sources associated with gender are mentioned in the bracketed information that CNI provides along with the headlines. These include the Canadian (and Nova Scotian) Advisory Council on the Status of Women, Justice for Women Coalition, Educational Committee Against the Abuse of Women, Winnipeg’s Urban Safety for Women and Children Fact Finding Group and a study conducted by a network of shelters for battered women. Although the headline reader does not see this information it does give us an idea of the type of sources upon which this coverage is based. This information also reinforces the point that, whether directly identified or implied, sources are overwhelmingly predispositioned to dealing with the victimization of women.

These results reinforce our quantitative and qualitative findings. As part of the overall picture, we found that women are emphasized as victims 35 to 51 times more often than men in headlines. In addition, we saw that although high levels of male suffering are revealed in headlines, most focus on the suffering of women, placing it into a societal context and personalizing it for the reader. This focus is seen in sources which, when focusing on gender, focus almost solely on women’s victimization.

 

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