000 01334pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aSinha, Dipankar
245 _aKargil episode in Bengali print media
260 _c2002
300 _ap.2803-809.
362 _a6 Jul
520 _aThe mass media have a significant role in facilitating the construction of both the public sphere and democratic politics and can aid in the shaping of people's orientations, beliefs and attitudes. In the multicultural setting of India, the construction of public sphere is a complex affair in which the mass media play a critical role. What if at a crucial point in the life of a democracy the supposedly democratic option of the media creates trends which effectively contributes to the refeudalisation of the public sphere? This paper seeks to examine how two vernacular newspapers - Ananda Bazar Patrika, a privately owned newspaper with the largest circulation in West Bengal and Ganashakti, owned and controlled by the Communist party Party of India-Marxist, which has ruled in West Bengal Since 1977 - contributed to 'reformulating' the public sphere during the Kargil 'war', from late May to July 1999. - Reproduced.
650 _aMass media
650 _aKargil conflict
773 _aEconomic and Political Weekly
909 _a52975
999 _c52975
_d52975