2010
DOI: 10.25200/bjr.v6n2.2010.15
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Journalism and the culture of othering

Abstract: In seeking to render problematic traditional conceptions of journalistic identity, this article critiques the seemingly natural, even 'common sensical' structures of social exclusion recurrently underpinning its formulation. More specifically, it explores, firstly, a series of insights provided by feminist and gender-sensitive critiques of journalism. In assessing the typically subtle imperatives of sexism in news reporting, it considers the extent to which journalistic identity continues to be defined within … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
(8 reference statements)
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“…Thus, whether or not the alternative hypothesis about the perpetrator of the Nice attack, Bouhlel, presented in the Telegraph on July 18 (that he was suicidal), marked a turning point in its reporting, that possibility was already unlikely to "stick, " given the messages, reinforced by stylistic choices, that had preceded it. Journalists and other news actors need to turn "a critical eye to their complicity in normalizing prejudice" (Allan [2010(Allan [ ] 2014; stylistic choices, which play so subtle yet so central a role in shaping cultural representations and public opinion, are a good place to start.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, whether or not the alternative hypothesis about the perpetrator of the Nice attack, Bouhlel, presented in the Telegraph on July 18 (that he was suicidal), marked a turning point in its reporting, that possibility was already unlikely to "stick, " given the messages, reinforced by stylistic choices, that had preceded it. Journalists and other news actors need to turn "a critical eye to their complicity in normalizing prejudice" (Allan [2010(Allan [ ] 2014; stylistic choices, which play so subtle yet so central a role in shaping cultural representations and public opinion, are a good place to start.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, whether or not the alternative hypothesis about the perpetrator of the Nice attack, Bouhlel, presented in the Telegraph on July 18 (that he was suicidal), marked a turning point in its reporting, that possibility was already unlikely to "stick, " given the messages, reinforced by stylistic choices, that had preceded it. Journalists and other news actors need to turn "a critical eye to their complicity in normalizing prejudice" (Allan [2010(Allan [ ] 2014; stylistic choices, which play so subtle yet so central a role in shaping cultural representations and public opinion, are a good place to start. On that morning, a bucket bomb set by a young Iraqi refugee exploded on a District Line train of the London Underground outside the Parsons Green station.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%