Most of today’s humanitarian catastrophes are taking place in countries of the so-called Global South. At the same time, countries in that part of the world are often among those least likely to be visited by those living in the West. In this configuration, what most of Western audiences know about and how they relate to victims of large-scale humanitarian disaster is almost exclusively derived – directly or indirectly – from various media accounts. Not surprisingly, media scholars have thus recently shown a growing interest in theorizing Western spectatorship of mediated distant suffering. The goal of this chapter is to offer a conceptual contribution to this debate by discussing four dimensions in the representation of distant suffering t...
How far does globalization extend the boundaries of community by bringing distant suffering directly...
The chapter discusses and analyses media reactions to the catastrophic tsunami of December 2004. It ...
Several scholars have identified an important emotional role in news media’s covering of internation...
The mediation of distant suffering raises fundamental ethical, political, social and policy-related ...
The mediation of distant suffering has been at the centre of a broader debate about globalisation of...
Applying Critical Discourse Analysis (Fairclough, 1992; Chouliaraki, 2006), this paper explores the ...
The interest in audience responses to mediated distant suffering has been growing in the last decade...
This article identifies that the current literature on "distant suffering" lacks a nuanced account o...
This paper explores audience reflections on issues of moral responsibility towards distant others in...
This article draws on the results of a large-scale audience study to examine how audiences respond t...
This introductory chapter carves out a space for the histories of emotions and the senses within hum...
This article aims at demonstrating the relevance of the concept of ‘media witnessing’ as an analytic...
A growing number of scholars have empirically engaged with audience reactions toward mediated distan...
Confronted with images of distant suffering on a frequent basis, television viewers are often invite...
Drawing on the anthropology of moralities, the phronetic turn in media ethics scholarship, and audie...
How far does globalization extend the boundaries of community by bringing distant suffering directly...
The chapter discusses and analyses media reactions to the catastrophic tsunami of December 2004. It ...
Several scholars have identified an important emotional role in news media’s covering of internation...
The mediation of distant suffering raises fundamental ethical, political, social and policy-related ...
The mediation of distant suffering has been at the centre of a broader debate about globalisation of...
Applying Critical Discourse Analysis (Fairclough, 1992; Chouliaraki, 2006), this paper explores the ...
The interest in audience responses to mediated distant suffering has been growing in the last decade...
This article identifies that the current literature on "distant suffering" lacks a nuanced account o...
This paper explores audience reflections on issues of moral responsibility towards distant others in...
This article draws on the results of a large-scale audience study to examine how audiences respond t...
This introductory chapter carves out a space for the histories of emotions and the senses within hum...
This article aims at demonstrating the relevance of the concept of ‘media witnessing’ as an analytic...
A growing number of scholars have empirically engaged with audience reactions toward mediated distan...
Confronted with images of distant suffering on a frequent basis, television viewers are often invite...
Drawing on the anthropology of moralities, the phronetic turn in media ethics scholarship, and audie...
How far does globalization extend the boundaries of community by bringing distant suffering directly...
The chapter discusses and analyses media reactions to the catastrophic tsunami of December 2004. It ...
Several scholars have identified an important emotional role in news media’s covering of internation...