COVID-19 和指责数字:英国网络新闻中对 COVID-19 的指责及其影响的话语表述

Jamie Matthews, Farzeen Heesambee
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摘要

在公众试图了解 COVID-19 危机及其长期影响的过程中,不可避免地出现了寻求归咎的现象。有关责任归属的新兴研究只关注最初的爆发,而对各国如何应对大流行病关注不够。我们的研究采用了一种纵向方法,考察了英国经历 COVID-19 (包括 COVID-19 的后续波次)期间出现的归咎数字。通过对英国三家在线新闻机构(英国广播公司、《卫报》和《在线邮报》)的文章进行取样,我们分析了在 COVID-19 的新闻报道中将特定行为者表述为责任人物的语言要素和话语策略。为了确定行动者及其表述,我们重点关注三个要素:(1) 直接、间接或隐含地提及某个行动者;(2) 表达对该行动者的愤怒、怨恨或挫败感;(3) 文本和话语特征,对其作为或不作为造成的负面结果进行指责。我们的分析表明,在整个分析期间出现了三个突出的指责人物。英国政府是主要的受指责者。我们认为,这与疫情爆发初期强调责任外部化的情况不同。然而,我们还发现,公众和个人也被塑造成了受指责的形象。对于后者,我们强调个人在采取预防行为和遵守 COVID-19 限制规定方面的责任。最后,我们探讨了这些发现对大流行病传播动态的意义。
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COVID-19 and figures of blame: Discursive representations of blame for COVID-19 and its impacts in UK online news
As publics have attempted to make sense of the COVID-19 crisis and its longer-term impacts there has been an inevitable search for blame. Emergent research on the attribution of blame has focussed exclusively on the initial outbreak, with insufficient attention paid to how countries have responded to the pandemic. Our study adopts a longitudinal approach, examining the figures of blame that emerged across the UK’s experience of COVID-19, including subsequent waves of COVID-19. By sampling articles from three online UK news outlets (BBC; The Guardian; Mail Online), we analyse the linguistic elements and discourse strategies that contribute to the representation of specific actors as figures of blame in news coverage of COVID-19. To identify actors and their representations we focus on three elements: (1) direct, indirect or implied reference to an actor; (2) an expression of anger, resentment or frustration towards this actor; (3) textual and discursive features that nominate agency for their actions or inaction for a negative outcome. Our analysis shows that three prominent figures of blame emerged across the period of analysis. The primary actor represented as a figure of blame was the UK government. This, we argue, differs from the initial phases of the outbreak where there was an emphasis on externalising blame. We also found, however, that the public and the individual were constructed as figures of blame. For the latter it was through an emphasis on personal responsibility in the adoption of preventative behaviours and in following COVID-19 restrictions. We conclude the paper by exploring the significance of these findings for the communicative dynamics of the pandemic.
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