Van Dijk
Van Dijk
Van Dijk
Media contents
The Interdisciplinary study of news
as discourse
INTRODUCTION
This chapter presents a discourse-analytical approach to the media.
Discourse analysis emphasizes the obvious, but as yet not fully
explored fact that media “messages” are specific types of text and
talk. The theories and methods of the new interdisciplinary field of
discourse analysis may be brought to bear in a more systematic and
explicit account of the structures of media messages. Since discourse
analysis is a multi-disciplinary enterprise, it is also able to relate this
structural account to various properties of the cognitive and
sociocultural context. Because the other chapters of this book pay
detailed attention to the production, reception, uses, and socio-
cultural functions of media discourse, the present chapter only briefly
deals with such a broader study of those aspects of mass
communication.
Discourse analysis emerged as a new transdisciplinary field of
study between the mid-1960s and mid-1970s in such disciplines as
anthropology, ethnography, microsociology, cognitive and social
psychology, poetics, rhetoric, stylistics, linguistics, semiotics, and
other disciplines in the humanities and social sciences interested in
the systematic study of the structures, functions, and processing of
text and talk (for details, see the contributions in van Dijk, 1985b;
also Chapter 1 in this volume and Chapter 6 on earlier and related
forms of textual analysis of media discourses). In order to limit
discussion of the vast domain of discourse-analytical media research,
I shall focus on the study of news in the press. For further theoretical
details, and for extensive applications in the study of various cases of
press coverage, the reader is referred to van Dijk (1985b; 1988a;
1988b).
News as discourse 109
Example
As the example of analysis, I use a news report that appeared in the
British Daily Mail of 21 January 1989 (see the appendix to this
chapter). It deals with the last act of a dramatic episode that had angered
Conservatives, and hence the right-wing press, for a long time: the
sanctuary sought by a Sri Lankan refugee, Viraj Mendis, in a
Manchester church. After having lived for more than two years in the
sacristy of the church, Mendis was finally arrested during a massive
police raid on the church, which led to protests not only from church
officials, but also from many anti-racists and other groups defending
the rights of immigrants and refugees. When a last recourse to the
courts failed, Mendis was finally put on a plane to Sri Lanka, and it is
this event which our news report is about.
This news item is part of a corpus of news reports, background
articles, and editorials in the press about ethnic affairs which I studied
as part of a project on racism in the press (van Dijk, 1991). This media
project is itself part of a larger research program about the reproduction
of racism in discourse, including not only media discourse, but also
everyday conversations and textbooks (van Dijk, 1987a; 1987b). As
will become clear from our analysis of this particular news report, the
Western press, and especially the right-wing press, (re)produces and
further emphasizes a negative image of minorities, immigrants, and
refugees, and thereby contributes to increasing forms of intolerance,
prejudice, and discrimination against Third World peoples in Europe
and North America.
TEXT SEMANTICS
Local and global coherence
Both discourse analysts and ordinary language users are primarily
interested in meaning: what is this text or talk about, what does it
mean, and what implications does it have for language users? Part of
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sentences, a text also has overall semantic unity. This global coherence
is described by what we all intuitively know as themes or topics. Topics
conceptually summarize the text, and specify its most important
information. In theoretical terms such topics can be described as
semantic macro-propositions, that is, as propositions that are derived
from sequences of propositions in the text: for instance, by macro-
rules such as selection, abstraction, and other operations which reduce
complex information. The hierarchical set of topics or macro-
propositions forms the thematic or topical structure of the text.
Language users employ such macro-structures in order to understand
globally and to summarize a text. In news discourse, the top of this
macro-structure is conventionally expressed in the headline and the
lead paragraph.
The report in the Mail may be represented as a list of propositions,
subsequently reduced to a shorter list of macro-propositions or main
topics. Through repeated applications of the macro-rules (macro-rules
are recursive) we arrive at a list of main topics such as:
Implications
One of the most powerful semantic notions in a critical news analysis
is that of implication. We saw earlier that much of the information of
a text is not explicitly expressed, but left implicit. Words, clauses,
and other textual expressions may imply concepts or propositions
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