When We Know What We Don’t Know: Uncertainty, Ignorance and Speculation in the UK Television Coverage of Airplane Disasters

Julia Boelle
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Abstract

This article examines how the media deal with absent information by examining representations of uncertainty, ignorance and speculation in the UK television coverage of airplane disasters. Drawing on thematic and discourse analyses, the article argues that there is a development over time whereby two phases can be discerned: (1) the (initial) ignorance phase and (2) the epilogue phase. The former describes coverage that contains an absence of information. The findings show that the reporting in this phase draws on modality and speculation to counterbalance the absence of information regarding the airplane disasters. The epilogue phase factually concludes what happened and brings a form of resolution to the incidents. As a result, information is presented with more certainty than in the ignorance phase. These findings have implications for journalism studies more generally because they refine our understandings about the development of media coverage on events and situate the concepts of uncertainty, ignorance and speculation at the forefront of the discipline.
当我们知道我们所不知道的:不确定性,无知和猜测在英国电视报道的飞机灾难
本文通过考察英国电视报道中不确定性、无知和猜测的表现,研究了媒体如何处理缺失的信息。根据主题和话语分析,文章认为,随着时间的推移,可以区分两个阶段的发展:(1)(初始)无知阶段和(2)尾声阶段。前者描述的是缺乏信息的报道。研究结果表明,这一阶段的报道利用模式和猜测来抵消有关飞机灾难信息的缺失。尾声阶段实际上总结了所发生的事情,并为事件提供了一种解决方案。因此,信息的呈现比无知阶段更加确定。这些发现对新闻研究具有更广泛的意义,因为它们改进了我们对媒体报道事件发展的理解,并将不确定性、无知和猜测的概念置于该学科的前沿。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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