Suchergebnisse
Filter
Format
Medientyp
Sprache
Weitere Sprachen
Jahre
18159 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Media Discourse
In: European journal of communication, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 246-248
ISSN: 0267-3231
Investigating media discourse
In: Domains of discourse
Impoliteness in media discourse
In: Interfaces - Studies in language, mind and translation Vol. 5
Forest-Climate Politics in Bangladesh's Media Discourse in Comparison to Global Media Discourse
Forest and climate issues are prominent within the policies and media in Bangladesh, as well as on the global level. In this study, media discourses from 1989 to 2010 from the "International Herald Tribune" and "The Daily Ittefaq" of Bangladesh are analyzed. Quantitative content analysis classifies 16 frames of the forest and climate issue and 17 political actors. Substantial differences between the forest and climate discourses of the national and international media have been discovered. The national print media reports that the forest is in a crisis due to climate change, whereas the international print media describes the for- est as a solution opportunity to climate change. The hypothesis that the international media drives the na- tional media discourse is rejected. The national media forest and climate discourse in Bangladesh began five years earlier than in the international media, and the different framing of the forest and climate issues can be explained by the influence of strong actors on both the national and international level. Journalists and politicians are the strongest influences in the national print media (The Daily Ittefaq) and primarily frame the discussion around the adverse impact of climate change on the forest in Bangladesh, a country that faces potentially severe effects from climate change. By stressing that climate change has caused a forest crisis, the national media brings attention to a threat that they are not responsible for. Scientists, Non-Governmental Organizations and international organizations are the major voices in the international print media (International Herald Tribune). They shape the global forest and climate media discourse around the wider scope of forests' role in climate change. International scientists and NGOs present themselves as problem solvers of climate change by framing the discussion around the mitigating role of the forests. These strategic arguments explain the differences in media discourse. ; Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2012 ; peerReviewed
BASE
Media Discourse after the War
The discourse about the Great War during the interwar period was shaped by numerous factors. The emergence of new media facilitated the use of new forms of expression and profoundly changed the representations of the war. Radio broadcasts helped to create new commemorative practices. Films and photography established a new visual language to depict the war. Yet, the discourse about the war also involved established print media. Official histories and memoirs became key elements of the post-war debate. Overall, the media discourse reflected the political conflicts of the period and the tensions between modern and traditional forms of collective memory.
BASE
Fear Control in Media Discourse
In: Southeastern Europe: L' Europe du sud-est, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 200-219
ISSN: 1876-3332
This article deals with how fear is misused in media discourse. Pursuing the claim that it is impossible to eliminate fear from the public sphere, this paper argues that fear control is a technique widely used by certain interest groups to generate and spread uncertainty among people in order to create an atmosphere in which their goals are easily reachable. This paper will discuss the concepts of discourse, hegemony, and power relations in order to show how public language (both written and spoken) in media discourse reflects, creates, and maintains power relations. In this sense, fear, which is a crucial "energizing fuel" of such public language, could be considered and further elaborated as both a contextual variable and as a tool for facilitating power relations by applying various techniques. Aiming to show how media use and control the nature and level of fear in public discourse, I will discuss two techniques – the commercialization of fear and the method of "othering." While commercialization implies the mass (re)production and (re)appropriation of fear in a public space, "othering" has been applied when the object of reporting is an out-group individual or community and self-group is using the media as a tool for their negative portrayal, thus creating boundaries and provoking discrimination and violence. The case of Serbia will be used to indicate how techniques of "othering," linked with the regime's propaganda, may contribute to the creation of an atmosphere of fear, and make a people seek protection and become easy prey for manipulation.
Media discourses: analysing media texts
In: Issues in cultural and media studies
Joker in News Media Discourse
In: Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai. Ephemerides, Band 65, Heft 2, S. 41-65
ISSN: 2065-9555
"The entertainment media often delivers cultural symbols, which occasionally inform news media discourse. Such is the case of the "Joker" being used as a symbol of chaos. Since the character's existence and popularity generated a pool of possibilities for political associations, the latest Joker film by director Todd Phillips, which premiered in 2019, caused controversy on many levels: "The real threat of Joker is hiding in plain sight" (The New York Times 2019); "Joker isn't an ode to the far right – it's a warning against austerity" (The Guardian 2019). The polemical aspect of the discourse prompted by this film is apparent in the frames used by the news media to cover Joker's premiere. This paper aims to identify these news media frames, using an inductive clustering method, and further investigate them by exploring theories of social construction of reality, with a focus on psychoanalytic aspects of the hero/villain myth that informs these news frames.
Keywords: Media Frames, Myth, Constructivism, Joker.
"
Discourse Markers in British Media Discourse
In: Bulletin of Chelyabinsk State University, Heft 9, S. 28-37
ISSN: 2782-4829
Manipulating truth in media discourse
Тhis paper aims to investigate the language journalists use to present news from a certain perspective and thus create public opinion. More precisely, it offers a critical discourse analysis of Macedonian and American journalistic texts reporting on one and the same political event. The main goal is to compare and contrast the specific language tools (lexical-semantic, pragmatic and stylistic) employed in the journalistic texts with different political affiliation. The analysis reveals that there is interrelatedness between textual form and content. Journalists make a careful selection of persuasive strategies to frame the news and present it from certain, often 'personal', perspective. The intentionally and cautiously chosen lexical units, pragmatic markers and rhetorical tropes help journalists manipulate the news and present it in such a way that it supports a specific political cause. In this way, they tend to influence the opinions of the people and indirectly impact the political and social situation in the country.
BASE