Article
Article name The Republic of Crimea Printed Media Market Transformation in the Present Time
Authors Yegorova L.G. Candidate of Philology, Associate Professor, legora@list.ru
Bibliographic description Yegorova L. G. The Republic of Crimea Printed Media Market Transformation in the Present Time // Humanitarian Vector. 2018. Vol. 13, No. 5. PP. 62–69. DOI: 10.21209/1996-7853-2018-13-5-62-69.
Section MEDIA TEXT IN THE PUBLIC COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
UDK 070:316.77(292.471)
DOI 10.21209/1996-7853-2018-13-5-62-69
Article type
Annotation The informational space of the Republic of Crimea has undergone fundamental changes as a result of the annexation by the Russian Federation. The article is devoted to the analysis of the principal tendencies of the Crimean media space transformation in the second half of 2014–2015. The author classifies editions by a number of parameters, including material construction, subjects, language of output. The research methodology is based on system approach to the mass media analysis. Such methods as characterization, classification, comparative method, statistical analysis, etc. are used in the research. The author comes to the conclusion that the total number of registered printed media in the Crimea has significantly decreased ‒ a number of editions for various reasons (such as not re-registration in the Roskomnadzor, problems with funding, etc.) terminated their activity. At the same time, there is a tendency for new newspapers and magazines to come to the peninsula media market. The author draws attention to the fact that, despite the quantitative changes that have taken place in the media market, the thematic focus of the printed mass media has practically not changed, the largest share of the market is occupied by socio-political and information printed media. Analysis of the Crimean printed media functioning in 2014–2015 reveals that 50 periodicals of 166 were established by state or political party organizations. As for 116 private periodicals, 60 were established by private individuals, 48 were established by limited liability companies and 8 by social organizations and communities. Monolingual periodicals predominate among 166 registered Crimean printed media. Thus 122 printed media are published solely in Russian, 28 printed media are published in Russian, English, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatars, 13 periodicals are bilingual (10 are published in Russian and English, 3 – in Russian and Ukrainian), 3 periodicals are published in Crimean Tatars. According to the author, the tendency of Russian-language publications prevalence has preserved. The author also points out that among the registered print media mono-language editions predominate.
Key words media space, printed media, print media market, subject orientation, printed media classification
Article information
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