DISSERTATION ABSTRACT
Given and New: Media discourse and the
construction of community on national days
Diana ben-Aaron
National anniversaries such as independence
days demand precise coordination in order to make citizens change their
routines to forego work and spend the day at rest or at festivities that
provide social focus and spectacle.
The complex social construction of national days is taken for granted
and operates as a given in the news media, which are the main agents
responsible for coordinating these planned disruptions of normal routines. This study examines the language used
in the news to construct the rather unnatural idea of national days and to
align people in observing them.
The data for the study consist of news stories about the Fourth of July
in the New York Times, sampled over 150 years
and are supplemented by material from other sources and other countries. The study is multidimensional, applying
concepts from pragmatics (speech acts, politeness, information structure),
systemic functional linguistics (the interpersonal metafunction and the
Appraisal framework) and cognitive linguistics (frames, metaphor) as well as
journalism and communications to arrive at an interdisciplinary understanding
of how resources for meaning are used by writers and readers of the news
stories.
The analysis shows that on national
anniversaries, nations tend to be metaphorized as persons having birthdays, to
whom politeness should be shown.
The face of the nation is to be respected in the sense of identifying
the nationÕs interests as oneÕs own (positive face) and speaking of citizen
responsibilities rather than rights (negative face). Resources are available for both positive and negative
evaluations of events and participants and the newspaper deftly changes
footings (Goffman 1981) to demonstrate the required politeness while also heteroglossically
allowing for a certain amount of disattention and even protest – within
limits, for state holidays are almost never construed as Bakhtinian festivals,
as they tend to reaffirm the hierarchy rather than invert it. Celebrations are evaluated mainly for
impressiveness, and for the essentially contested quality of appropriateness,
which covers norms of predictability, size, audience response, aesthetics, and
explicit reference to the past.
Events may also be negatively evaluated as dull (ÒbanalÓ) or inauthentic
(ÒhooplaÓ). Audiences are
evaluated chiefly in terms of their enthusiasm, or production of appropriate
displays for emotional response, for national days are supposed to be occasions
of flooding-out of nationalistic feeling.
By making these evaluations, the newspaper reinforces its powerful
position as an independent critic, while at the same time playing an active
role in the construction and reproduction of emotional order embodied in Òthe
nationÕs birthday.Ó As an occasion
for mobilization and demonstrations of power, national days may be seen to
stand to war in the relation of play to fighting (Bateson 1955). Evidence from the newspaperÕs coverage
of recent conflicts is adduced to support this analysis.
In the course of the investigation, methods
are developed for analyzing large collections of newspaper content,
particularly topical soft news and feature materials that have hitherto been
considered less influential and worthy of study than so-called hard news.
In his work on evaluation in newspaper stories, White (1998) proposed
that the classic hard news story is focused on an event that threatens the
social order, but news of holidays and celebrations in general does not fit
this pattern, in fact its central event is a reproduction of the social
order. Thus in the system of news
values (Galtung and Ruge 1965), national holiday news draws on ÒgroundÓ news
values such as continuity and predictability rather than ÒfigureÓ news values
such as negativity and surprise.
It is argued that this ground helps form a necessary space for hard news
to be seen as important, similar to the way in which the information structure
of language is seen to rely on the regular alternation of given and new
information (Chafe 1994).