All posts tagged with 'discourse analysis'
Blog Updates
Sheena Raja is currently a doctoral student of Media Studies at Rutgers University and a lecturer of South Asian History at Montclair State University. Her current research interests include the framing and reporting of “social responsibility”. She has her masters degree in South Asian Studies from Columbia University and an undergraduate degree in Finance from Rutgers University. Prior to turning to scholarly research, she spent 2 years as a manager of marketing at MTV Networks — an experience that became a strong catalyst for studying the intersection of media and culture.
The Bad Apples: Examining ‘Greedy’ Wall Street Investors, CEOs and the Financial System in News Magazine Discourse from 1980-2009
In the troughs of the boom-and-bust economic cycles, journalists have flocked to topics such as malpractice and fraud attracting readers to gawk at the corporate spectacle. Ironically, revealing the dark underbelly of capitalism has become the subject of blockbuster films, television shows and chart-topping novels. During periods of economic instability, greed has been a recurring theme developed by the news media blaming a few “bad apples”—namely, Wall Street investors and corporate criminals—for tainting the sacred space of free market competition.
Amidst the current global recession, my interest is to explore the manner in which “greed” rears its ugly head into mainstream American news, again. In this research paper, I will map the contextual transformation of “greed” discourse over the past three decades in mainstream news magazines since the rise of neoliberalism. Upon analyzing the usage of the term by decade, I argue that greed is no longer reserved for a contained group of financial scoundrels but the entire capitalist system. The resulting cynicism may debilitate public trust in a financial system supposed to protect its security and cripple the prospect for potential social change.
Michael Ferenchick is in his second year of the New School University’s master’s in Media Studies program. He earned a B.A. in English Literature from Tufts University and has worked as a singer and gardener. Current interests focus on the sociology of media as a methodological approach toward studying work, labor and medicine. He intends to pursue his studies beyond the master’s level.
The Discourse and Media Environment of Direct to Consumer Drug Advertisements
Direct to Consumer Drug Advertisements increasingly saturate popular media landscapes in the United States. Ultimately, the discourse of such texts functions as an instrumental fore shaping our perceptions of health and illness as well as redefining the very parameters such concepts are predicated on. Drawling from a sample of 350 print advertisements, this paper identifies and examines three discursive processes which organize the texts: “synthetic personalization,” “conditionalization,” and solicitation of consumer action. These processes are shown to exist by means of specific grammatical, syntactical and lexical construction. Furthermore, this paper demonstrates how these discursive architectures situate the discussion of health and illness within a political economic context where the orientation of speaker to audience is expressed via a consumption and production dichotomy. The final section of the paper states the importance in making problematic the current trajectory of medical discourse in a market context.