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British Newspaper Discourse

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Title: British Newspaper Discourse


1
British Newspaper Discourse
  • The construction of news

2
Functions of the headline
  • Attract the readers attention to the story (or
    paper, if on the front page)
  • Tell the reader what the story is about
  • summarising the content of the story
  • indicating the evaluation of the story
  • indicating the register of the story
  • indicating the focus of the story

3
Headline language evaluation
  • An emphatic triumph (Sun)
  • A shattering blow (Mirror)

4
Headline language
  • Specialised vocabulary
  • Playing with words (puns)
  • Creativity metaphor / metonymy
  • Playing with sounds
  • Playing with knowledge
  • Special grammar

5
Headline language grammar
  • grammatical words omitted
  • no verb
  • present tense
  • past participle
  • to-inf for future
  • extended noun phrases

6
Ambiguity
  • police squad helps dog bite victim

they help the person who was bitten by a dog
they help the dog to bite the victim
7
Headline ambiguities
  • Crowds rushing to see pope trample 6 to death.
  • Foot heads arms body

8
The construction of news
  • What gets in?

9
The construction of news
  • the reporter does not go out gathering news,
    picking up stories as if they were fallen apples,
    he creates news stories by selecting fragments of
    information from the mass of raw data he receives
    and organizing them in journalistic form.
  • (Chibnall 1982 76)

10
  • Where does news come from?

11
News comes from a variety of sources
  • It then undergoes
  • Selection, transformation and mediation

12
stance is a refracting and structuring medium
  • Different newspapers and news broadcasts report
    differently, both in content and presentation
  • They express affiliations and disaffections in
    the way they represent or mediate by means of
    transformation or differential treatment in
    presentation
  • This is part of the social construction of news
    but before transformation and treatment there is
    the question of selection the decision that
    something is worth including, is relevant

13
Selection events become news when they are
selected for inclusion in a news report
  • There is a difference between events that happen
    out there and news. News is not found or even
    gathered it is a creation of the journalistic
    process
  • selection gives us a partial view of the world.
  • texts come out of a context

14
so what makes an item newsworthy?
  • Each source will have criteria for selection and
    choice of what is newsworthy or worth including
  • it is a matter of certain criteria which have a
    gatekeeping function, filtering and restricting
    news input. a question of values known as news
    values

15
  • According to Fowler(1991 13) the news media
    select events for reporting according to a
    complex set of criteria or values.
  • The list includes conflict (war, controversy
    over issues), currency (of public concern),
    bizarreness (unusual), prominence (about
    prominent people), impact (number of people
    affected), proximity (who it affects and where it
    takes place) and timeliness (how recently it
    occurred) (Curtis 2011)

16
News values
  • Negativity
  • Peace v war? disasters rather than triumphs
  • Immediacy /recency
  • Breaking news v yesterdays news? Single events
    rather than long processes
  • Proximity
  • Small fire in town in Chile? Cultural proximity
    and relevance
  • Lack of ambiguity / simplicity
  • Britney v Middle East easy to understand
  • Novelty
  • Dog bites man v man bites dog? Unexpectedness and
    scarcity
  • Personalization
  • Is there a human interest? To promote
    identification and empathy or disapproval
  • Eliteness
  • George Bush v Donald Tusk elite people and
    nations
  • Others?? Composition intensity (based on Bell
    1998 74)

17
changes
  • Cardiff report on
  • The quality and Independence of British
    Journalism
  • Tracking the changes over 20 years
  • Cardiff School of Journalism, media and Cultural
    Studies

18
Where news comes from
  • Press release material is being used more often
    as a basis for
  • articles, and phrases are frequently taken
    verbatim by the journalists from a
  • limited number of press releases
  • 60 percent of press articles come wholly or
    mainly from pre-packaged sources

19
PR sources
  • . The findings suggest that public relations
    often does much more than merely set the agenda
    it was found that 19 percent of newspaper stories
    were verifiably derived mainly or wholly from
    public relations material, while fewer than half
    the stories appeared to be entirely independent
    of
  • traceable PR

20
PR concerens
  • . The most PR-influenced topic was health,
  • followed closely by consumer/business news
  • and entertainment/sport.

21
News imposes a structure
  • Not only is news judged during the selection
    process, it is then transformed as it is encoded
    for publication news represents the world in
    language, and language is a semiotic code which
    imposes a structure of values, social and
    economic in origin, on whatever is represented
    (Fowler 1991 2-4

22
The news construct and values
  • Caldas- Coulthard (2003 273) emphasises this
    point, stating that news is not an objective
    representation of facts, but a cultural
    construct that encodes fixed values.
  • Evaluation is pervasive in practically all forms
    of linguistic communication.

23
Once a topic is selected then the next thing..
  • Is who gets to speak
  • news has to be gathered so there are a number of
    sources, events and institutions which are
    frequently used as sources sometimes called
    accessed voices
  • Sources monitored routinely such as parliament,
    councils, police, emergency services, courts,
    diary events, royalty, airports, other news media

24
Accessed voices 2
  • organizations issuing statements and holding
    press conferences (government departments, local
    authority departments, public services,
    companies, trade unions, non-commercial
    organizations, political parties, armed forces)

25
Accessed voices 3
  • Individuals making statements, seeking publicity
  • (prominent people, members of the public)
  • The interesting thing is how they are introduced
    and how their words are used

26
Attribution and authorial endorsement
  • The way accessed voices are reported is subject
    to the choice of the reporter
  • the linguistic resources by which
    speakers/writers include, and adopt a stance
    towards, what they represent as the words,
    observations, beliefs and viewpoints of other
    speakers/writers.

27
Source specification
  • how is the nature of the source specified?
  • (personalized, impersonalized, institutional,
    named, anonymous, generalized, specific, generic,
    aggregate, collective, association)

28
Source status
  • Sources are often associated with some level of
    status, authority or power in the current speech
    community (see accessed voices)
  • source type has an impact and the type of source
    chosen indicates the values of the reporting
    source

29
Inclusion means evaluating relevance
  • When a writer/speaker chooses to quote or
    reference the words or thoughts of another.
  • By referencing the words of another, the writer,
    at the very least, indicates that these words are
    in some way relevant to his/her current
    communicative purposes.
  • Thus the most basic intertextual evaluation is
    one of implied relevance'.

30
extra-vocalisation using others words
  • There are a number of factors including the
    degree of authority which is indicated of the
    source and the degree to which the writer/speaker
    endorses (or dis-endorses) the attributed
    material.
  • As X, perhaps the world's leading authority on Y,
    has demonstrated, ... (high authority /
    authorially endorsed, the writer indicates they
    share responsibility with the source for the
    proposition/proposal)
  • X says that... (neutral with respect to
    endorsement)
  • Some Xs have claimed that...(dis-endorsed,
    author disavows responsibility for the
    proposition/proposal)

31
Formulations of Attribution
  • a range of variables, including the
    authoritativeness of the attributed source and
    the extent of authorial endorsement of the
    attributed proposition.
  • An endorsement-neutral formulation such as Some
    researchers argue...' is represented as simply
    one view among many.

32
  • In contrast, endorsed formulations (for example,
    As X has so compellingly demonstrated)
  • the writer not only indicates their personal
    investment in the current argument, but adds to
    the argumentative force by representing the
    current view as one which is not theirs alone but
    one which is shared with, for example, the wider
    community or with relevant experts.

33
Disendorsement
  • Even if writers/speakers choose to include what
    other people say they can also distance
    themselves from the utterance, indicating that
    they take no responsibility for its reliability.
  • This is commonly done by the use of a quoting
    verb such as to claim' and allege', nouns such
    as rumour, adverbs such as reportedly.

34
Signalled choices?
  • Does the writer indicate support for, acceptance
    of, or agreement with the views or observations
    provided by the attributed material?
  • writers can either choose to remain neutral with
    respect to endorsement (neither endorsing or
    disendorsing)
  • or they can choose to actively take a position
    (endorsing or disendorsing).

35
  • The speech criticiesd those who falsely claim
    that Bush is just a Texas catle-rancher Disendor
    sement
  • The Archbishop rightly describes the killing as
    evil. Endorsement
  • The report demonstrates clearly Endorsement

36
Responsibility
  • Who is presented as taking responsibility for the
    utterance under consideration
  • sole responsibility (all unattributed material)
  • no responsibility (as with dis-endorsed,
    attributed material)
  • shared responsibility (with endorsed attributed
    material)

37
textual integration
  • assimilation or insertion
  • a clear separation between the words of the
    source and those of the source or whether the
    distinction has been blurred
  • actual words
  • or reformulation and paraphrasing

38
Direct and indirect quotation
  • whether the writer purports to offer the reader
    the actual words of the attributed source or
    whether these have been reworked in some way,
    often with the result that the wording is more
    like that of the text than that of the original
    speaker/writer.
  • At its most simple, this distinction separates
    direct quotation (where the attributed material
    is clearly separated from the rest of the text)
  • and indirect quotation (where the words of the
    attributed are not so clearly demarcated and
    where there may be considerable paraphrasing.)

39
Indirect quotation
  • through indirect speech of this type, the
    distance between external and the authorial voice
    is reduced.
  • There is some degree of assimilation by the text
    of the attributed meanings.
  • Such assimilation may be increased through the
    use of the various grammatical structures of
    attribution. (reporting verbs)

40
Attribution and text types
  • There are marked differences between text types
    e.g. fiction vs. news reporting
  • ambiguous attribution and blurred distinctions
    can be used for a series of rhetorical purposes
  • the media also have a set of editorial rules
    regarding the accuracy of reporting
  • in literary studies the distinction between
    indirect and free indirect speech has undergone a
    vast amount of research

41
Argumentative and persuasive genres
  • the social purpose of these genres is to argue a
    case in such a way that the audience is convinced
    of the truth or merits of the viewpoint
  • Exposition Thesis Arguments Reiteration
  • hard news is about events
  • comment is about issues and opinions
  • news which is created rather than just reported
    can be part of a persuasive build up of argument
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