“Once More into the Breach!”: Allusions to Agincourt and the Medieval Past in Cross-Channel Political Reporting of Brexit

2021 ◽  
pp. 53-74
Author(s):  
John C. Ford
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
pp. 141-156
Author(s):  
Angela Phillips

This chapter examines the 2016 Brexit campaign as a window into how the right-wing establishment press in the United Kingdom influences the country’s broad political agenda. The chapter demonstrates how right-wing news cultures of the tabloid press played a crucial agenda-setting role in the European referendum debate. The right-wing press exploited the Remain/Leave dichotomy and the BBC’s notion of “strategic balance” to frame the debate within discursive limits set by the conservative elite. The result further undermined trust in British broadcasting, while largely excluding organized labor from the referendum debate. This chapter also provides comparative fodder for scholars of right-wing news in the US context, as the EU referendum in many ways replicated the structural conditions that underpin the two-party horse race coverage common in US mainstream political reporting.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 3266-3282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Sadler

Existing research on communication on Twitter has largely ignored the question of how users make sense of the fragmentary tweets with which they are presented. Focusing on the use of Twitter for political reporting in post-revolutionary Egypt, this article argues that the production of mental stories provides readers with a mechanism for interpreting the meaning of individual tweets in terms of their relationships to other material. Drawing on contemporary narratology, it argues that Twitter exhibits key elements of narrativity, but that a creative reading process is nonetheless required to transform this incipient narrativity into coherent, sense-making mental narratives. This foregrounding of the reader’s creative role makes stories on Twitter highly fluid and dynamic. Through reference to classic critical theory, I propose that this nonetheless represents an evolution rather than a radical break from earlier forms of narrative reception, which in many cases demanded similarly creative reading practices.


Author(s):  
В.П. Сапон

Статья содержит анализ представлений американской прессы 1917–1918 гг. о политической деятельности известного российского либерального политика П.Н. Милюкова, который после Февральской революции получил почетное прозвище «русского американца». В ходе исследования выясняется, каким образом из любимого персонажа политических репортажей лидер кадетов превращается в персону нон-грата. The article contains an analysis of the views of the US press in 1917–1918 on the political activities of the famous Russian liberal politician P.N. Milukoff, who after the February Revolution got the honorary nickname of “Russian American”. The research reveals in what way the Cadet leader turned from a favorite character of political reporting into a persona non-grata.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 50-62
Author(s):  
Andrew Dodd ◽  
◽  
Peter English ◽  
Johan Lidberg ◽  
Maxine Newlands ◽  
...  

UniPollWatch was the largest student journalism project ever undertaken in Australia. Approximately 1000 students from 28 universities worked to cover the 2016 federal election. The project aimed to provide effective training on political reporting in a work-integrated learning environment. Utilising a combination of analysis and descriptions of the project and a survey research methodology, the results of this project suggest that by placing student reporters in the midst of a fluid and highly contested election environment they learn by observing and doing. The project demonstrated that students’ attitudes to, and aptitude for, covering politics varied greatly, but that the skills needed for political reporting can be improved through projects such as UniPollWatch.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document