YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Religious Broadcasting
Essays 31 - 60
In six pages this paper compares Catholic religious practices with the magic used in primal religious rituals with Kenneth Kuykend...
14). Consequently, Barth began to formulate a personal theology based solely on scripture, virtually ignoring the theological prin...
In nine pages the major political influence and religious impact of minister and evangelist Billy Graham are discussed within the ...
In five pages Greeley's text which discusses the changes in American religious observances is considered and reveals that contrary...
In five pages the religious views of the Sumerians as represented in the Epic of Gilgamesh are contrasted and compared with contem...
Christians, Muslims, and Jews are the most discriminated religious groups in the world. This essay provides data about religious d...
the United States (Culture of North Korea, 2010). The capital of Pyongyang, which had been severely bombed by the United States d...
heretofore been clean-shaven for the previous fourteen years of employment. His abrupt demand to be allowed to serve food with fa...
benefit of any mutilating tool; Sands (2001) notes that to suggest this trance - or hallucination - is motivated by anything other...
the season to mere consumerism" (Dwyer, 2004). As noted above, it is this "hypersensitivity" and our attempt to avoid offending an...
it will not bode well with most major corporations. Religious discrimination is found in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 19...
strong independent Church (based on the assumption of the Corpus Christianum common to all three confessions) through which he des...
social order that refuses to acknowledge the elements of good and bad. Correspondingly, Fontana (2003) points out how the good "a...
as significant as its ability to impart information. The theory of agenda setting asserts that mass media do not tell people outr...
women on his television show, might have created the impression that this was just an act after all. He would say things that any ...
this trend, Austin points out that the "era of ever-bigger national government is coming to an end" (Austin, 2000, p. 7). In previ...
affect the viewer (Lavers, 2002). In other words, the viewer has little or no emotional reaction to the violent acts they are view...
since the Vietnam War made most Americans truly aware of broadcast journalism, there appears to have been a growing dissatisfactio...
between them by the feelings they evoke in us. Walters writes that tension is one of the most important barometers of audience res...
enrolled in the Art Institute of Chicago.7 He traveled to Ireland in 1931, painting the countryside until he wound up in Dublin, w...
that could otherwise not be expressed merely by literary methods; rather, photography helps the world understand more about itself...
response is directly related to how well the reporter can convey the necessary emotion in but a few critical paragraphs, a challen...
That is, it did, until the Hutton report. The 2004 report excoriated the BBC, and lauded Tony Blairs government, for supposedly ai...
our minds the targeted messages of mass media so that we "eventually, even if subtly, begin to act out or speak differently as we ...
lives are miserable. Studies have shown that animals in zoos "can suffer physically, mentally and emotionally. For this reason, ca...
of programs and resources but there is still evidence that teachers are not using them to their full potential. One of the reasons...
This research paper/essay pertain to ethical decision-making and confidentiality issues. Drawing on an episode of ER broadcast in ...
In six pages this essay arguments on the issue of whether or not broadcast media should be able to reject advertisements with cont...
In a paper consisting of twelve pages the decision to ban advertising from the broadcast media is examined with the position suppo...
Stein (1997) reports that eight San Francisco-based journalism and communications organizations have formed the Media Diversity Ci...