Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Spirituality That Sells: Religious Imagery In Magazine Advertising, Rick Moore
Spirituality That Sells: Religious Imagery In Magazine Advertising, Rick Moore
Rick Clifton Moore
This study examines the use of religious imagery in contemporary advertising. An empirical study is reported here, examining religious imagery in advertisements appearing in three national magazines. This article addresses the contexts in which such imagery appears, the specific uses to which it is put, and differences between the representations of Western and Eastern religious traditions.
Pacifism In Film: Exclusion And Containment As Hegemonic Processes, Rick Moore
Pacifism In Film: Exclusion And Containment As Hegemonic Processes, Rick Moore
Rick Clifton Moore
No abstract provided.
The Residue Of Culture: An Ellulian Dialogic Analysis Of Religious Imagery In A Network Television Drama, Rick Moore
The Residue Of Culture: An Ellulian Dialogic Analysis Of Religious Imagery In A Network Television Drama, Rick Moore
Rick Clifton Moore
No abstract provided.
Agapeistic Ethics And News Coverage Of Secular/Religious Conflict, Rick Moore
Agapeistic Ethics And News Coverage Of Secular/Religious Conflict, Rick Moore
Rick Clifton Moore
Agapeistic ethics has received a small amount of attention from scholars interested in how it might be applied to the journalistic profession. This investigation continues that discussion but specifically in regard to how journalists might cover stories that entail religious dimensions. In analyzing the particular case of reporting on legal disputes related to teaching of intelligent design in schools, the paper hopes to shed light on the unique contributions agape can make to media ethics.
As Predicted: Fact And Improbability In News Coverage Of Astrology, Rick Moore
As Predicted: Fact And Improbability In News Coverage Of Astrology, Rick Moore
Rick Clifton Moore
This study examines a recent eruption of news about astrology. It uses as a lens research on how traditional news values might allow “mystical” ideas to maintain public acceptance in spite of scientific evidence against them. Contrasting that approach with a lens provided by Neil Postman, the current study finds reporting about astrology did not provide significant scientific basis for dismissal of the belief. The two lenses for discussing this provide very different insights, however.