Under Fujimori’s regime, Peruvian Press knew the explosion of Popular Press. This one had a very special relationship with Fujimori’s regime and his communication strategies. It could be seen through positive president representations and contenders defamation. Following a semio-pragmatic approach, this article underlines narrative and semantics constants present in media content through this press in their first page and put discursive strategies deployed in relation with reception practices.
Abstract
Under Fujimori’s regime, Peruvian Press knew the explosion of Popular Press. This one had a very special relationship with Fujimori’s regime and his communication strategies. It could be seen through positive president representations and contenders defamation. Following [...]