In:Doing Politics: Discursivity, performativity and mediation in political discourse
Edited by Michael Kranert and Geraldine Horan
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 80] 2018
► pp. 361–382
Chapter 15“All this is a boon to Britain’s crumbling democracy”
Meta-reporting about the TV debates in the British General Election 2015
Published online: 12 December 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.80.15sch
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.80.15sch
Abstract
This contribution deals with meta-reporting in the 2015 British election campaign. First, the concept of mediatisation and the consequences of mediatisation for political communication will be discussed more generally. Second, the concept of meta-reporting will be introduced as both symptom and consequence of an increased degree of mediatised political communication. Thirdly, based on previous findings, a qualitative analysis of newspaper reporting on the four TV debates during the 2015 election campaign exhibits various elements of meta-reporting. Meta-reporting about these media-initiated and mediatised communicative events includes (a) reporting about spin doctoring, image work and strategies for self-representation of political actors, (b) discussing the media format itself and the media actors involved in them, and (c) the effect of the TV debates on the audience and on voting behaviour. The analysis of meta-reporting about the TV debates indicates both a de-politicisation of political agency and a politicisation of media agency.
Article outline
- 1.Mediatisation of political communication
- 2.Meta-reporting
- 3.Data and methodology
- 4.Results
- 4.1Process news
- 4.1.1Theatrical metaphor
- 4.1.2Media formats
- 4.2Self-referential news
- 4.2.1Focus on image
- 4.2.2Media actors in the spotlight
- 4.2.3Influence on voting behaviour
- 4.1Process news
- 5.Conclusion
Acknowledgement Notes References
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