2018
DOI: 10.1177/1742766518811367
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Trans-mediatized terrorism: The Sydney Lindt Café siege

Abstract: This article presents an empirical analysis of the Australian media representation of terrorism using the 2014 Sydney Lindt Café siege as a case in point to engage with the notion of moral panic. Deploying critical discourse analysis and case study as mixed methods, insights into trans-media narratives and aftermath of the terrifying siege are presented. While news media appeared to collaborate with the Australian right-wing government in the reporting of terrorism, social media posed challenges and raised sec… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The siege paralysed the nation for 2 days, ending with the death of a Muslim extremist gunman and two civilian hostages (Archie, 2016). In the aftermath, thousands visited the site to pay tribute; many expressed concerns about possible violence or intimidation directed at Muslims (Ali & Khattab, 2018). As news of the siege spread, reports appeared of a Muslim woman removing her hijab while travelling on the train (out of fear of retaliation).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The siege paralysed the nation for 2 days, ending with the death of a Muslim extremist gunman and two civilian hostages (Archie, 2016). In the aftermath, thousands visited the site to pay tribute; many expressed concerns about possible violence or intimidation directed at Muslims (Ali & Khattab, 2018). As news of the siege spread, reports appeared of a Muslim woman removing her hijab while travelling on the train (out of fear of retaliation).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%