爱沙尼亚新闻界对死亡文化的描述

Pub Date : 2011-12-01 DOI:10.3176/ARCH.2011.2.05
H. Harro-Loit, K. Ugur
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引用次数: 0

摘要

死亡是日常生活中无所不在的一部分,引起个人和公众的反应。在新闻媒体中,死亡和纪念的主题在硬新闻、特写、图片和讣告中交织在一起。传统上,交通和工业事故(有多名受害者)、谋杀案件以及重大自然灾害和战争新闻被认为是有新闻价值的,因为新闻的作用不是反映世界,而是突出问题和特殊情况。当报道成百上千人(在自然灾害、战争或工业事故的情况下)或一人死亡时,新闻报道是不同的;然而,这个维度通常与地理距离和接近程度有关(Adams 1986)。死亡图像促使记者们就是否、在哪里以及如何发布死亡和尸体的图像展开辩论。事实上,如何使用死亡图像的问题从未完全澄清。虽然我们在本文中不关注这些困境,但应该考虑到爱沙尼亚媒体通常不以可识别的方式代表尸体。在国家悲剧中,如造成多人伤亡的事故、自然灾害和代表国家精英的人的死亡等,死亡的方面和随后的调解(公众)哀悼仪式很可能成为媒体事件(Dayan & Katz 1992;Pantti & Sumiala 2009)。事实上,对葬礼和公众哀悼的报道可能如此密集,以至于打断了日常生活和广播节目(例如总统的葬礼或戴安娜王妃的哀悼)。除了媒体事件之外,新闻学研究还为不同类型的密集报道提供了或多或少的详细概念,其中媒体在特定事件或主题的框架和社会放大中起着重要作用:介导的丑闻,媒体炒作,振幅小于媒体事件的新闻浪潮(Paimre & Harro-Loit 2011)。然而,这种与死亡有关的密集报道病例应与日常新闻流分开分析,这是本研究的重点。与死亡有关的一般媒体背景广泛而多样,从个人(百岁老人的死亡)和私人葬礼到关于战争、灾难、事故和谋杀受害者的国家和国际新闻报道。这些报告文学代表了关于死亡的许多意义的文化观念,但注意到关于死亡主题没有报道的内容也很有价值。不管它们的具体主题和情况如何——自然灾害、工作场所事故、谋杀或老年人的自然死亡——新闻报道中关于死亡的故事最终都是关于悲伤的。关于死者的新闻报道更多的是关于活着的人,而不是关于死者的(Kitch & Hume 2008, 187),它们特别关注幸存者的情绪(Walter et al. 1995)。本研究的目的是分析爱沙尼亚日报如何在日常新闻流中代表死亡,并在新闻故事中找到死亡文化的元素。因此,我们既不分析悲伤和与死亡有关的仪式的表现,如葬礼、公开哀悼和纪念活动,也不分析关于暴力死亡的原因和内疚的讨论等。我们排除了讣告,因为“人们普遍认为,讣告的重点应该是捕捉生命,而不是描述死亡”(Starck 2007, 373)。在绘制媒体报道死亡的各种方式时,我们的目标是创建一个定性内容分析模型,该模型有助于定义报纸中死亡报道的要素,并能够看到死亡话语的哪些部分被包括或排除。我们提出了一个七维的分析模型,部分来自理论新闻价值理论,部分来自新闻媒体死亡报道的研究。…
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REPRESENTATION OF DEATH CULTURE IN THE ESTONIAN PRESS
Introduction Death is an omnipresent part of daily life and evokes both personal and public reactions. In the news media, themes of death and remembrance are woven together in hard news, features, pictures and obituaries. Traditionally transport and industrial accidents (with multiple victims), murder cases, as well as major natural disasters and war news are considered newsworthy because the role of the news is not to mirror the world but to highlight problems and extraordinary situations. Journalistic coverage is different when reporting about the death of hundreds and thousands (in case of natural disasters, war or industrial accidents) or one person; nevertheless this dimension is usually in correlation to geographical distance and proximity (Adams 1986). Death imagery pushes journalists into the debate over whether, where and how they should publish images of death and corpses. Indeed, the issue of how to use images of death has never been entirely clarified. Although we do not focus, in this paper, on these dilemmas it should be taken into consideration that the Estonian media do not usually represent corpses in an identifiable way. In national tragedies, such as accidents causing many injuries and deaths, natural disasters and the death of people representing the national elite, etc., the aspect of death and the subsequent mediated (public) mourning rituals are likely to become media events (Dayan & Katz 1992; Pantti & Sumiala 2009). Indeed, coverage of a funeral and public mourning can be so intensive that it interrupts everyday life and broadcasting programs (e.g. funeral of a president or mourning of Princess Diana). In addition to media event the journalism studies provide more or less elaborated concepts for different types of intensive coverage where the media plays a significant role in framing and social amplification of a certain event or topic: mediated scandal, media hype, news waves of smaller amplitude than media event (Paimre & Harro-Loit 2011). However, such death-related intensively reported cases should be analysed separately from the daily news flow that is the focus of the present research. The general death-related media context is broad and varied, ranging from the individual (death of a hundred years old person) and private funerals to national and international news reports about the victims of wars, catastrophes, accidents and murders. These reportages represent cultural ideas about the many meanings of death but it is also valuable to notice what is not reported concerning the death-theme. Regardless of their specific topic and circumstances--natural disaster, workplace accident, murder or the natural passing of the elderly--the stories told about death in journalism are ultimately about grief. News stories of the dead are about the living far more so than about the dead (Kitch & Hume 2008, 187) and they focus in particular on the emotions of survivors (Walter et al. 1995). The goal of this study is to analyse how Estonian daily newspapers represent death in everyday news flows and find the elements of death culture in the news stories. Consequently, we analyse neither the representation of grief and death-related rituals such as funerals, public mourning and commemoration nor the discussions about the cause and guilt concerning violent deaths, etc. We exclude obituaries as "it is widely accepted that the emphasis in obituary composition should be on capturing life rather than describing the death" (Starck 2007, 373). In mapping the variety of ways that the media cover death, we aim to create a model for qualitative content analysis that helps to define the elements of death coverage in newspapers and enables seeing which parts of the death discourse are included or excluded. We propose a seven-dimensional model for analysis that partly comes from theoretical news value theory and partly from studies concerning death coverage in news media. …
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