Before the Court and in the Press: Newspaper Coverage of Creationism and School Prayer Movements' Legal Framing

James E. Stobaugh, Sean Huss
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Abstract

During the last century, social movement organizations have mobilized around what role religion should play in school. These struggles have focused on teaching creationism and evolution in the science classroom and the appropriateness of school prayer and Bible reading in public schools. Court cases like Scopes and Engel are infamous in American history, while others are much less well-known. This project explores media coverage of social movements that do not engage in typical protest activity and instead choose to operate in more institutional contexts. This paper will begin by presenting the coverage patterns of each movement across the twentieth century, illustrating how the media's focus is primarily influenced by movements either initiating legal action, being compelled to appear in court, or reacting to judicial proceedings. Next, it will present a typology of coverage that these legal-based movements received. A movement's legal framing is carried in and through the media, and sometimes, the framing is all that is reflected in media attention, making this type of reporting so attractive to movement organizations. The legal constraints over framing and legitimate actors account for some of the media exposure, which was likely to be equitable in tone and quantity to both the creationism and school prayer movements. To understand media coverage of social movements, scholars must begin to account for the cycles and patterns of coverage likely to occur when a movement ends up in court.
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法庭前和新闻中:报纸对创世论和学校祈祷运动法律框架的报道
上个世纪,社会运动组织围绕宗教在学校中应扮演何种角色展开了斗争。这些斗争的重点是在科学课堂上教授创世论和进化论,以及在公立学校进行学校祈祷和阅读圣经是否合适。斯科普斯案和恩格尔案等法庭案件在美国历史上臭名昭著,而其他案件则鲜为人知。本项目探讨了媒体对那些不参与典型抗议活动,而是选择在更多机构背景下运作的社会运动的报道。本文将首先介绍 20 世纪对每场运动的报道模式,说明媒体的关注点如何主要受到发起法律行动、被迫出庭或对司法程序做出反应的运动的影响。接下来,它将对这些基于法律的运动进行类型化报道。一场运动的法律框架通过媒体得以体现,有时,媒体关注的只是运动的框架,这使得这类报道对运动组织具有极大的吸引力。关于框架和合法参与者的法律限制是媒体报道的部分原因,而媒体报道的语气和数量对创世论运动和学校祈祷运动可能是公平的。要理解媒体对社会运动的报道,学者们必须开始考虑当运动最终诉诸法庭时可能出现的报道周期和模式。
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