This article analyses the discriminatory discursive practices of one leading liberal Hong Kong newspaper, the South China Morning Post, with a view to examining to what extent they mirror those found in the literature (which to date has focused primarily on Europe). The data for the study consist of 80 articles concerning one news event, Chinese Mainlanders claiming the right-of-abode in Hong Kong during the period 30 January 1999 to 19 August 2000. A review of the rather diffuse literature leads to the development of a composite taxonomy of discriminatory discursive practices. The Hong Kong data are then tested against this taxonomy. Examples of all of the strategies in the taxonomy are found to be present in the Hong Kong data, with certa...
A year before the 1997 handover, I read with amusement an article in an entertainment magazine descr...
Comparative discourse studies have tended to emphasize uncovering the dichotomous systems or the dif...
Hong Kong’s “localists” depict mainlanders as locusts ruining the territory and bringing an end to a...
Individual Paper no. 67In the first few months of 2012 there were several incidents which brought to...
A notice carried in the Apple Daily depicting people from mainland China as locusts and a Peking Uni...
In the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong, a former British territory in southern China retu...
This paper is concerned with media perceptions and how these manifest as hegemonic practices. Explor...
This article examines the discriminatory discursive strategies adopted in the online interactions be...
This article uses corpus-assisted discourse studies to examine the discursive construction of collec...
After Hong Kong’s return to Chinese Sovereignty in 1997, the terms ‘mainlander’ and ‘Hongkonger’ hav...
This research investigates the discursive construction of Hong Kong identity in mediated political c...
This study examines the change in the representation of human rights issues in a corpus containing o...
In the twenty-two years from the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong from the United Kingdom to t...
socioeconomic conditions of its emergence, and mainstream media responses to the movement. It gives...
Title: ”I kolonialismens fotspår” Author: Erik Holm Subject: Undergraduate research paper in journ...
A year before the 1997 handover, I read with amusement an article in an entertainment magazine descr...
Comparative discourse studies have tended to emphasize uncovering the dichotomous systems or the dif...
Hong Kong’s “localists” depict mainlanders as locusts ruining the territory and bringing an end to a...
Individual Paper no. 67In the first few months of 2012 there were several incidents which brought to...
A notice carried in the Apple Daily depicting people from mainland China as locusts and a Peking Uni...
In the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong, a former British territory in southern China retu...
This paper is concerned with media perceptions and how these manifest as hegemonic practices. Explor...
This article examines the discriminatory discursive strategies adopted in the online interactions be...
This article uses corpus-assisted discourse studies to examine the discursive construction of collec...
After Hong Kong’s return to Chinese Sovereignty in 1997, the terms ‘mainlander’ and ‘Hongkonger’ hav...
This research investigates the discursive construction of Hong Kong identity in mediated political c...
This study examines the change in the representation of human rights issues in a corpus containing o...
In the twenty-two years from the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong from the United Kingdom to t...
socioeconomic conditions of its emergence, and mainstream media responses to the movement. It gives...
Title: ”I kolonialismens fotspår” Author: Erik Holm Subject: Undergraduate research paper in journ...
A year before the 1997 handover, I read with amusement an article in an entertainment magazine descr...
Comparative discourse studies have tended to emphasize uncovering the dichotomous systems or the dif...
Hong Kong’s “localists” depict mainlanders as locusts ruining the territory and bringing an end to a...