Occupational position and consumption of news: A research note
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Paul Nelissen
, Ruben Konig and Karsten Renckstorf
Abstract
This study explored in what way and to what extent people's occupational position corresponds with the consumption of news and the exposure to political content offered by the traditional mass media TV, radio, and newspaper, using survey data (N = 825). The influence of occupational position in general and perceived amount of public social capital (or: social network) on especially consumption of news as well as the exposure to political media content, was evident. Findings are in line with the central assumptions on ‘audience activity’ of audience-centered models in communication research in general and the ‘media use as social action’ approach especially (cf. Renckstorf and Wester, 2001, 2004). The subjectively perceived social context, indicated by occupational position as well as the subjectively held structure of relevancies is a central predictor of media use.
© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
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- Occupational position and consumption of news: A research note
- Book reviews
- Contributors
- Contents Volume 33 (2008)
Articles in the same Issue
- Partners' influence on each other's television exposure: Dominance or symmetry?
- The PSI-Process Scales. A new measure to assess the intensity and breadth of parasocial processes
- Online and print newspapers in Europe in 2003. Evolving towards complementarity
- The political economy of Croatian television: Exploring the impact of Latin American telenovelas
- Separating TV ads from TV programming. What we can learn about program-integrated advertising from economic theory and research on media use
- Occupational position and consumption of news: A research note
- Book reviews
- Contributors
- Contents Volume 33 (2008)