2021
DOI: 10.1177/14648849211001788
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‘Nobody feels safe’: Vulnerability, fear and the micro-politics of ordinary voice in crime news television

Abstract: The new prominence of ordinary voice in crime journalism – claims to have seen things, experienced things, felt things ‘first-hand’ – has the potential to decenter elite perspectives and open up crime news narratives to the voices of systemically criminalized subjects. However, I argue in this paper that the political potential of ordinary voice can only be realized in and through concrete instances of its use, and so needs to be examined within news texts as sites of micro-political struggle over meaning. Loo… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This silence is particularly significant in the Australian context where white voices have been at the epicentre of narratives about Black violence and criminality (see e.g. : Higgins, 2021; Wahlquist, 2018). Whiteness therefore, continues to control a ‘majoritarian narrative’ (Solorzano and Yosso, 2002) that creates a clear distinction between ‘white victimhood’ and Black violence.…”
Section: Post the Murder Of George Floyd May 2020mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This silence is particularly significant in the Australian context where white voices have been at the epicentre of narratives about Black violence and criminality (see e.g. : Higgins, 2021; Wahlquist, 2018). Whiteness therefore, continues to control a ‘majoritarian narrative’ (Solorzano and Yosso, 2002) that creates a clear distinction between ‘white victimhood’ and Black violence.…”
Section: Post the Murder Of George Floyd May 2020mentioning
confidence: 99%