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Manufacturing Concern:

Chapter Four: Specific Cases of Coverage

Jim Boyce

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Summary Article

 

 

 

The last chapter revealed a difference in the amount and type of headline coverage given to male and female victims of violence. This raises some obvious questions which I address in this chapter by examining some specific aspects of the headlines: chronological trends in headline coverage, front-page and multi-page headlines, headlines from only those CNI categories in the sample with gender-neutral titles, headlines from 1984 and headlines from the CNI category Child Abuse.

Chronological Trends

I will begin by examining chronological trends in coverage of male and female victims of violence. To determine how and whether this coverage fluctuated, I tabulated the coverage by year and season. The following chart contains the results:

 

Number and Percentage of Articles by Season and Year

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

Winter

43 (3.5)

35 (2.8)

54 (4.3)

113 (9.1)

245 (19.7)

Spring

47 (3.8)

55 (4.4)

68 (5.5)

89 (7.2)

259 (20.9)

Summer

29 (2.3)

41 (3.3)

76 (6.1)

76 (6.1)

222 (17.9)

Fall

59 (4.8)

128 (10.3)

194 (15.6)

135 (10.9)

516 (41.5)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

178 (14.3)

259 (20.9)

392 (31.6)

413 (33.3)

1242 (100.)

These numbers indicate a 120 per cent increase in coverage from 1989 to 1991, with the result being that 65 per cent of the coverage appeared in 1991 and 1992. Each season saw a two to three-fold increase in coverage during the four years.” Winter, spring and summer were proportionally similar (although they varied in particular years) while the fall contained nearly twice as many articles as any other season and 41.5 per cent overall. This fall coverage was most pronounced in 1990 and 1991 when it represented nearly half of the yearly coverage compared to one-third in 1989 and 1992.34

Similar trends occur among literal and contextual references to gender and violence. The results are as follows:

 

Number of Articles by Season and Year

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

 

Women Men

Women Men

Women Men

Women Men

Women Men

Winter

18     00

16     00

12     00

39     00

85     00

Spring

17     00

26     03

31     03

25     01

99     07

Summer

07     00

13     00

31     00

33     00

84     00

Fall

41     01

71     00

90     02

55     05

257    08

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

82     01

126     03

164     05

152   06

525     15

 

Conclusions about coverage of male victims are difficult to make because of the small sample size. For example, the 1992 increase in coverage can be attributed to one Canadian Press article which appeared in five of the newspapers. Thus, one-third of coverage of men, as noted above, is found on one day of our sample. In the case of women, coverage doubled between 1989 and 1991 before tapering off. These increases were 25 per cent smaller than those in overall coverage which slightly increased in 1992. Coverage in the winter, spring and summer was near parity while that in the fall was triple that of any other season. This concentration in the fall is due to contextual references, where fall headlines account for 78 per cent of the total (104 of 133) compared to fall literal headlines which follow general trends at 39 per cent (153 of 392).

Fall coverage comprised at least half of yearly coverage in 1989, 1990 and 1991 and one-third in 1992, and like overall coverage, it peaked as a percentage of yearly coverage in 1991 and 1992.

To test for a link between fall coverage and coverage of the Montreal murders and their anniversaries, I calculated the number of headlines published during the two weeks following the murders on December 6, 1989, and the week before and after their anniversaries in 1990, 1991 to 1992. 1 also calculated the number of headlines which were gender-specific and the number associated with the murders rather than to other issues related to violence. The following results show the number of headlines in this period and, in the case of “Total Headlines,” their percentage of yearly coverage:

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

Total Headlines

39/21.9

44/17.0

57/14.5

37/08.9

177/14.3

Gender-Specific Headlines

31

36

36

19

122

Headlines on Montreal Murders

29

27

25

17

98

These weeks represent about four per cent of the sample but more than 14 per cent of the headlines. Headlines are two-and-one-half times more prevalent than average fall coverage and five times higher than the average coverage of any other season. Percentage-wise, coverage declined during the four years, particularly from 1991 to 1992. 

Sixty per cent of these headlines (122) are gender-specific, nearly double the average, and most of these are contextual (84) and linked to the Montreal murders (98). The highest percentage of headlines emphasizing the Montreal murders occurs during 1989 and 1990. Other issues related to violence begin competing with this coverage in the last two years although references to the Montreal murders still represent half of the headlines in 1992.

These chronological observations necessitate a few words of caution. We are relying on the selection policies and practices of CNI. If articles are selected by CNI based on “significance,” it is possible that those concerning the anniversaries of the Montreal murders, or other events, are considered less significant in some years than others, particularly in later years when the total amount of coverage is higher. In addition, it is beyond the scope of this thesis to determine the degree to which CNI’s selection represents overall coverage of violence and gender or whether this degree fluctuates between years. Finally, changes in the number of connotative headlines in any given year, as well as gender-specific events I have not considered to be contextual, may have an effect. Even if there were moderate distortions in the selection of headlines, however, it seems safe to conclude that coverage of gender and violence increased between 1989 and 1992, that there is significantly more coverage in the fall than in other seasons and that this fall coverage was particularly high in 1990 and 1991 and in the weeks surrounding the Montreal murders and their anniversaries.

 

Front-Page and Multi-Page Headlines

Another question that might be asked is whether the trends we have found characterize headlines appearing on front pages, the most visible part of the newspaper. Since many of these front-page articles continue on other pages of the newspaper, studying them allows us a chance to examine whether the headlines accompanying these continued portions are consistent with our findings.

One hundred and seventy-five headlines from the sample appear the front pages, including 21 in 1989, 47 in 1990, a peak of 70 in 1991 and 37 in 1992. They fall into the following groups (of these, one literal headline from 1990 and 1991 emphasizes men as victims):

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

1. Literal

07

18

22

09

56

2. Contextual

04

08

09

04

25

3. Connotative

05

10

18

13

46

4. Neutral

00

07

13

08

28

5. Other

05

04

08

03

20

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

21

47

70

37

175

Forty-six per cent (81 of 175) of front-page headlines directly refer to the gender of victims, women being emphasized forty times (79 to two) more frequently than men. These findings are similar to those of the overall sample. The peak years for gender-specific headlines as a percentage of yearly coverage and in absolute numbers were 1990 (47 or 56 per cent) and 1991 (70 or 47 per cent).

One hundred and twenty nine of these headlines continue onto other pages. To determine if the secondary headlines of these articles, where they exist, contain additional information on the gender of victims, I examined every fourth one. In each case, I considered whether the secondary headlines emphasized women, men or neither. In those cases where new information was presented, whether a minor variation on the original headlines or a new point, I considered whether it would have changed how I originally grouped the headline. After this analysis, I concluded there were no headlines which I originally had considered a direct reference that I would have changed. There were three cases where I would have redesignated a non-direct reference as a direct one (these all concerned women as victims). Secondary headlines, then, do not appear to lessen the focus on gender or on women.

 

Headlines From CNI Categories With Gender-Neutral Titles

The headlines in my sample which most clearly emphasize gender are those from the CNI categories Battered Women and Violence Against Women, categories whose titles explicitly identify the gender of victims. I have examined the remaining categories --Crime and Criminals: Statistics (CC), Crime and Criminals -- Media Coverage (MC), Family Violence (FV), Victims of Crime (VC) and Violence (VI) -- to determine the degree to which they emphasize the gender of victims (the number of headlines emphasizing male victims is listed in brackets):

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

1. Literal

11.5(1)

20.0(1)

21.5(3)

18.0(6)

71.0(11)

2. Contextual

25.0

0.0

1.0(1)

0.0

26.0(01)

3. Connotative

11.0

21.5

50.0

31.5

114.0

4. Neutral

44.0

59.0

73.5

121.5

298.0

5. Other

20.0

14.5

21.0

20.5

76.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

111.5(1)

115.0(1)

167.0(3)

191.5(6)

585.0(12)

The number of headlines in these categories increased 41 per cent in these four years compared to 141 per cent overall. Twelve per cent of these headlines are literal references to gender compared to 34 per cent overall

while contextual references account for five per cent compared to 14 per cent overall. These contextual headlines are virtually non-existent when we consider that 25 of the 26 were published in 1989 and 23 of these concerned the Montreal murders. Like later articles related to the murders, these would likely have been found in the category Violence Against Women had it existed in 1989. The percentage of headlines emphasizing male victims is, at 12 per cent, eight times higher than average and the ratio of headlines emphasizing women to those emphasizing men is eight to one (the lowest to which this ratio drops is three to one in 1992, although five of the six headlines emphasizing men in this period appeared on one day).

I have broken down the data to see whether these trends are found in a particular CNI category:

 

CC

MC

FV

VC

VI

Total

 Literal

10.0(1)

0.0

47.5(9)

4.5(1)

9.0

71.0(11)

Contextual

0.0

1.0(1)

0.0

1.0

24.0

26.0(01)

Connotative

0.0

0.0

107.0

7.0

0.0

114.0

Neutral

145.0

6.5

33.0

60.0

53.5

298.0

Other

8.0

7.0

29.5

22.0

9.5

76.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

163.0(1)

14.5(1)

2 17.0(9)

94.5(1)

96.0

585.0(12)

The greatest number and proportion of headlines emphasizing the gender of victims are found in the groups Family Violence and Violence. If we consider that 23 of the Violence headlines appeared in 1989 and concerned the Montreal murders, then the only group where more than 10 per cent of the headlines emphasize the gender of victims is Family Violence (22 per cent). Family Violence also contains the majority (9 of 12) of headlines emphasizing male victims. In short, the number of articles is smaller, the focus on gender weaker and the proportion of headlines emphasizing male victims is higher than in overall coverage. Among these five categories, Family Violence contains the greatest number and proportion of gender-specific headlines although they are represented at rates lower than average. 

The relative sparsity of headlines emphasizing the gender of victims, particularly women, makes sense since these headlines are likely to be placed by CNI in gender-specific categories. This was seen in the case of the Montreal murders, where contextual references similar to those that were found in gender-neutral categories in 1989 were in later years found in Violence Against Women. The same is true of headlines about other gender-related issues, such as those concerning the National Panel on Violence Against Women. Even with this exodus, however, 17 per cent or, when we exclude headlines about the Montreal murders, 12 per cent of the headlines indicate the gender of victims and female victims are still emphasized eight times as often as men.

 

Headlines From Previous Years

This thesis has examined portrayals of gender and violence for the years 1989 and 1992 but one might wonder how the findings compare to headlines from other years. To get an idea of this, I examined CNI headlines from 1984. Caution must be taken with the findings since only three of the CNI categories used in this thesis existed in 1984: Family Violence, Victims of Crimes and Battered Women (the last being established that year). I separated these headlines into the groups used earlier in this thesis, applying the same guidelines, although I omitted the contextual group since I did not identify any national events connected to violence and gender (eight headlines were deleted from the sample using the guidelines from chapter two). There were 235 headlines and they break down as follows:

 

BW

FV

VC

Total

% Total

Literal

64

04

00

68

28.9

Connotative

07

14

11

32

13.6

(Sexual)

(00)

(00)

(11)

(11)

43.8

(Family)

(07)

(14)

(00)

(21)

13.6

Neutral

13

13

77

103

298.0

Other

19

01

12

32

76.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

103     

32

100

235

100.0

Gender-specific literal references are as prevalent in these headlines as between 1989 and 1992 although the lack of contextual references results in gender-specific headlines representing a smaller proportion of the 1984 coverage. Connotational and other headlines are also found at 1989 to 1992 rates while Neutral headlines are 50 per cent higher. In terms of individual CNI categories, we find gender-specific headlines almost exclusively in Battered Women. There are fewer found in Family Violence (13 per cent) than in 1989 to 1992 (21 per cent) and none are found in Victims of Crime (compared to five per cent). No headlines emphasize men as victims of violence.

Headlines from 1984 focus on wife abuse, reporting on it in terms of legal cases (“Judges fail to send wife abusers for counselling, study finds” 84.06.30 WFP.3), as a societal issue (“Group teaches wife-beaters to change ideas about women” 84.12.08 TS.A8) and battered women’s shelters (“Battered wives to get temporary shelter” 84.08.31 TS.H6). As in headlines from 1989 to 1992, 1984 headlines only see violence in terms of inter-gender cases, with husbands portrayed as victimizers and wives as victims. Unlike later headlines, however, the scope of violence against women appears to be largely limited to wife abuse and, to a lesser degree, sexual violence. The term “violence against women” is not found in these headlines. Consequently, women’s victimization is discussed in terms of specific cases rather than being embedded in all aspects of society as it is characterized in later headlines, particularly those headlines surrounding the Montreal murders and their anniversaries.

 

Headlines From the CNI Category “Child Abuse”

The findings of this thesis concern the portrayal of adult victims but one might wonder how headlines portray child victims. To do so, I examined headlines from the CNI category Child Abuse for the years 1989 to 1992.

Headlines containing words such as beating, strapping, assault, abuse, torture and death, and which clearly referred to violence in the context of the headline, were considered to refer to abuse, as were headlines describing acts like “Mother kept daughter, 4 chained and naked in dark (90.11.23 TS.A 1). These headlines were sorted according to whether they referred to male or female victims:

 

1989

1990

1991

1992

Total

Total Articles

70

86

82

70

308

Boy Victims

06

07

02

01

16

Girl Victims

06

07

05

03

21

 

 

 

 

Twelve per cent of the headlines emphasize gender -- about a third of the proportion found in our sample on adult victims -- and the gap between headlines emphasizing boy and girl victims is relatively small. All but one of the headlines concerned an individual case of abuse and this headline emphasized ethnicity as well as gender: “8 in 10 native girls sexually abused, study finds” (89.01.28 TS.A4). Children were overwhelmingly identified in terms of their age, being described as infants, tots, babies, children, and also as orphans, pupils and students. “Boy” and “girl” tend to be used as synonyms for “child.” Thus, it appears that we are to react to the age rather than the gender of victims in headlines such as “Mother pleads guilty to scalding daughter: three-year-old burned repeatedly” (92.04.01 GM.A6). A lack of concern with gender is exemplified in the following headline which describes a victim in three gender-neutral terms: “Parents sentenced to 2 years for allowing baby to starve to death: Toronto couple put tot on spartan herbal diet in hopes of raising ‘superchild”’ (90.07.25 MG.A1,2). Moreover, whereas many of the headlines concerning adults were about groups or individuals asking the government to address violence against women, we find the following gender-neutral approach to violence against children: “Children’s minister proposed: bureau suggested to combat abuse” (90.06.16 GM.A7).

Even in cases which could be considered contextual such as the abuse at St. Joseph’s Training School For Boys --“Beatings, sexual abuse alleged at Catholic-run reform school in Ontario” 90.04.08 MG.A7) -- it is not clear that the status of the victims is tied to their gender rather than age. In other words, nowhere do we see a reference to “violence against boys” rather than child abuse. In fact, it is the gender of the perpetrators which is more often indicated, whether it be a mother, father, dad, mom, priest or nun. The key relationship in headlines about child abuse is adult and child whereas in the case of violence against adults it is women and men.

 

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