Media-Political Parallelism: Legitimization of Migration Policy in Editorials in the Daily Newspaper “Delo”, article in the journal Dve domovini – Two Homelands
From the introduction:
This section mainly shows three things. First, it shows how the mainstream media completely gave up the floor to dominant political voices and worked as channels through which these voices became hegemonic. However, the media not only provided a space for such articulations, but actively contributed to shaping them, primarily by cutting out the voices of migrants and critical sub-political figures. Second, it shows how the mainstream media failed to critically address and question dominant political structures, ideologies, policies and ideas. Third, it shows the problematic continuation of xenophobic, racist, stereotypical, chauvinist, nationalist and similar rhetoric that still persists as the dominant framework through which Slovenian mainstream media depict and represent “the other”.
The section provides insight to a very problematic juncture of media and political discourses on migration. The empirical material that the authors of this section critically engaged with covers press clippings that included all printed and transcribed TV texts published and aired between 20 August 2015, when the “Balkan migratory route” came into existence, and 31 December 2015, when the humanitarian corridor began to close down. The media that the authors of this section addressed included the following print media: Slovenske novice, Delo, Dnevnik, Večer, Reporter, and Demokracija, and the TV show Odmevi, which is aired by the national public broadcaster RTV Slovenija. The articles that comprise the section make an empirical analysis of the selected material using various methodological and analytical approaches, from critical discourse analysis and framing to more theory-based interpretative approaches.
Table of contents
ANDREJA VEZOVNIK: Introduction to the Thematic Section
BREDA LUTHAR: Refugees and “Odmevi”: The Epistemology of Conventions
Articles are freely accessible at the website of the journal http://twohomelands.zrc-sazu.si/en/issues/articles_list/45/2017