Alex Hayter
York University, Communication and Culture, Graduate Student
- Born in New Brunswick, raised in North England and incubated on the Internet, I'm a Toronto-based new media addict who has worked in videogame marketing, print & online journalism, new media research, blog moderation... the list goes on! I studied educational games for my Master's and now work at an educational games and technology company called Spongelab.edit
- Jennifer Jensonedit
This study examines the way that China is portrayed by the Canadian news media at the national, local, and hyper-local levels, and across multiple media formats. With an average of over 40,000 new immigrants per year – a number that has... more
This study examines the way that China is portrayed by the Canadian news media at the national, local, and hyper-local levels, and across multiple media formats. With an average of over 40,000 new immigrants per year – a number that has seen rapid growth since the 1980s – Chinese are Canada's second largest immigrant group. As a result, identifying the topics and issues that receive news coverage is key to understanding the role that the media at every level play in shaping cultural discourse and contributing to notions of national identity. Using samples from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the Toronto Star, and Ming Pao, this analysis compares the coverage presented by mainstream broadcast news media and their online counterparts, as well as the coverage provided by a local newspaper with national reach and a hyper-local Chinese-language newspaper.