Title of article
Voters versus the Corpus of Fictional POTUS
Author/Authors
Cheng، R نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
28
From page
85
To page
112
Abstract
Scholars have argued that voting behaviour changes over time and, today, voters are
no longer loyal to traditional ‘political brands’. We, hence, try to explore, through
constructing ‘action corpora’ using novels, movies and TV dramas from the last 50 years
(1960-2012) relating to fictional US presidents to see what the mass media have been
conveying to the public subconsciously over time. We then looked at and discussed how
people have responded since they last voted over the past five US presidential elections
from 1992 through 2008 using excerpts from the Corpus of Contemporary American
English (COCA). While voters were found to fall into two broad categories when making
their voting decisions, powerful media bias right before elections could have caused vote
swings and, hence, voters could have voted for ‘the wrong person with all the wrong
reasons’ when, in fact, they were subconsciously warned – not by anyone else, but by the
mass media.
Keywords
presidential election , novels , movies , Voting behaviour , Mass media , fictional POTUS , Corpus application , TV dramas
Journal title
Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (JSSH)
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (JSSH)
Record number
2402270
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