Published online: 04 April 2022Past quantitative studies have shown that most media coverage is of men. Here we ask if the scarce coverage that women get is qualitatively different from that of men. We use computer-coded sentiment scores for 14 million person names covered in 1,323 newspapers to investigate the three-way relationship between gender, fame, and sentiment. Additional large-scale data on occupational categories allow us to compare women and men within the same profession and rank. We propose that as women’s fame increases their media coverage becomes negative more quickly when compared to men (a “paper cut”), because their violation of gender hierarchies and social expectations about typical feminine behavior evokes disproporti...
Previous research of gender differences in power has largely focused on the public domain (e.g., lea...
Media articles about women in STEM often emphasize gender in ways that may reinforce stereotypes. In...
A total of 779 article-embedded photographs from six popular US magazines during 2004 (Newsweek, Tim...
Published online: 04 April 2022Past quantitative studies have shown that most media coverage is of m...
In terms of the representation of women in society, great strides have been made in some areas, but ...
First published online: 3 September 2019A large body of studies demonstrates that women continue to ...
Positive or negative media coverage may have important consequences for individuals’ lives and abili...
In previous decades, women in Western countries have gained more influence in various social realms....
Feminist news media researchers have long contended that masculine news values shape journalists’ qu...
Like the media in general, the news is overwhelmingly dominated by men, both as correspondents and i...
The paper addresses the problem of why news content is dominated by what men consider to be newswort...
This report is part of a series of four reports examining the representation of gender and science....
Social media is a new public sphere where people can, in principle, communicate with each other rega...
Journalism as a profession is arguably one that has high ideals and principled values at its heart, ...
Predictions from the stereotype content model (SCM; Fiske et al. 2002) that suggest high-status care...
Previous research of gender differences in power has largely focused on the public domain (e.g., lea...
Media articles about women in STEM often emphasize gender in ways that may reinforce stereotypes. In...
A total of 779 article-embedded photographs from six popular US magazines during 2004 (Newsweek, Tim...
Published online: 04 April 2022Past quantitative studies have shown that most media coverage is of m...
In terms of the representation of women in society, great strides have been made in some areas, but ...
First published online: 3 September 2019A large body of studies demonstrates that women continue to ...
Positive or negative media coverage may have important consequences for individuals’ lives and abili...
In previous decades, women in Western countries have gained more influence in various social realms....
Feminist news media researchers have long contended that masculine news values shape journalists’ qu...
Like the media in general, the news is overwhelmingly dominated by men, both as correspondents and i...
The paper addresses the problem of why news content is dominated by what men consider to be newswort...
This report is part of a series of four reports examining the representation of gender and science....
Social media is a new public sphere where people can, in principle, communicate with each other rega...
Journalism as a profession is arguably one that has high ideals and principled values at its heart, ...
Predictions from the stereotype content model (SCM; Fiske et al. 2002) that suggest high-status care...
Previous research of gender differences in power has largely focused on the public domain (e.g., lea...
Media articles about women in STEM often emphasize gender in ways that may reinforce stereotypes. In...
A total of 779 article-embedded photographs from six popular US magazines during 2004 (Newsweek, Tim...