Confronted with images of distant suffering on a frequent basis, television viewers are often invited to take a moral stance. This article argues that illustrative of the viewers’ moral engagement with such news stories is the way they remember them. It studies the practice of media remembering as the discursive reconstruction of events witnessed through the media. Drawing upon empirical material from focus group discussions with Greek audiences, the article argues that there is a moral hierarchy in the way viewers remember distant suffering. This hierarchy, constructed through the intertwined processes of remembering and forgetting, reflects the political and cultural frameworks viewers employ in making sense of distant disasters
Today there is a wide variety of news genres, news sources and ways of watching the news for media u...
News carries a unique signifying power, a power to represent events in particular ways (Fairclough, ...
Drawing on the anthropology of moralities, the phronetic turn in media ethics scholarship, and audie...
Confronted with images of distant suffering on a frequent basis, television viewers are often invite...
This article critically engages with the concept of cosmopolitan memory, and it provides an empirica...
This article aims at demonstrating the relevance of the concept of ‘media witnessing’ as an analytic...
This paper explores audience reflections on issues of moral responsibility towards distant others in...
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...
Several scholars have identified an important emotional role in news media’s covering of internation...
This article identifies that the current literature on "distant suffering" lacks a nuanced account o...
The interest in audience responses to mediated distant suffering has been growing in the last decade...
Most of today’s humanitarian catastrophes are taking place in countries of the so-called Global Sout...
Applying Critical Discourse Analysis (Fairclough, 1992; Chouliaraki, 2006), this paper explores the ...
Today there is a wide variety of news genres, news sources and ways of watching the news for media u...
News carries a unique signifying power, a power to represent events in particular ways (Fairclough, ...
Drawing on the anthropology of moralities, the phronetic turn in media ethics scholarship, and audie...
Confronted with images of distant suffering on a frequent basis, television viewers are often invite...
This article critically engages with the concept of cosmopolitan memory, and it provides an empirica...
This article aims at demonstrating the relevance of the concept of ‘media witnessing’ as an analytic...
This paper explores audience reflections on issues of moral responsibility towards distant others in...
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...
Several scholars have identified an important emotional role in news media’s covering of internation...
This article identifies that the current literature on "distant suffering" lacks a nuanced account o...
The interest in audience responses to mediated distant suffering has been growing in the last decade...
Most of today’s humanitarian catastrophes are taking place in countries of the so-called Global Sout...
Applying Critical Discourse Analysis (Fairclough, 1992; Chouliaraki, 2006), this paper explores the ...
Today there is a wide variety of news genres, news sources and ways of watching the news for media u...
News carries a unique signifying power, a power to represent events in particular ways (Fairclough, ...
Drawing on the anthropology of moralities, the phronetic turn in media ethics scholarship, and audie...