1919-1920 - The Manila Times and Manuel L. Quezon: Difference between revisions

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(New page: == 1919-1920 - The Manila Times and Manuel L. Quezon == '''Abstract''' Dantes, H. J. & Manalang, M. C. (2012). 1919-1920: The Manila Times And Manuel L. Quezon – A Historical Case S...)
 
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View Thesis: [[Image:1919-1920_-_The_Manila_Times_and_Manuel_L._Quezon.pdf]]
View Thesis: [[Image:1919-1920_-_The_Manila_Times_and_Manuel_L._Quezon.pdf]]


  [[Category:Theses]][[Category:CMC Thesis]][[Category:Department of Journalism Thesis]][[Category:Thesis--Journalism]][[Category:Thesis--Journalism History]]
  [[Category:Theses]][[Category:CMC Thesis]][[Category:Department of Journalism Thesis]][[Category:Thesis--Journalism]][[Category:Thesis--Journalism History]][[Category:2012 Thesis]]

Latest revision as of 19:27, 6 April 2012

1919-1920 - The Manila Times and Manuel L. Quezon

Abstract

Dantes, H. J. & Manalang, M. C. (2012). 1919-1920: The Manila Times And Manuel L. Quezon – A Historical Case Study On Media Ownership And Politics. (Unpublished undergraduate thesis). University of the Philippines College of Mass Communication, Diliman, Quezon City

This thesis delves into the interplay between politics and media ownership by filling the gap in the history of one of the oldest newspapers in the Philippines: The Manila Times. The period from 1919 to 1920 was very eventful and crucial for Philippine history as a whole, and specifically for the history of journalism in the Philippines, with the second senatorial elections, the first Independence Mission, the newspaper strike of August 1920, among others. The then-Senate President Manuel Quezon was a major stockholder in the Times Company. Published journalism histories differ as to the images and leanings of the Times during the period. The researchers resolved this issue through the analysis of the paper’s issues from 1919-20. This particular case proved contrary to the expectations of theories and common-sense axioms, as Quezon, a newspaper owner directly engaged in the day-to-day politics of the period, was unable to exhibit a dominant influence on the newspaper production process. Rather, as the data and the historical findings showed, the other factors in the newspaper production process – the American editors and the Filipino rank-and-file – would vie for the production of images and leanings of the Times as shown in its frontpage articles and editorials.

View Thesis: File:1919-1920 - The Manila Times and Manuel L. Quezon.pdf