Difference between revisions of "File:BBC on the Israel-Palestine conflict.pdf"

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{{Document
|SourceURL=http://newsunspun.org/ |SourceName=News Unspun
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|source_URL=http://newsunspun.org/
|Author=Peter Allen
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|source_name=News Unspun
|Date=22 February 2013
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|authors=Peter Allen
|Note=Peter Allen's University of Leicester MA dissertation.
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|type=paper
|Comment=A trenchant analysis of the bias of the BBC Newsnight program in its reporting of the Israel/Palesine conflict. Although confined to the Newsnight series, it is a telling commentary on the subliminal {{ON}} nature of BBC News output and that of the Western [[MSM]] in general.
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|subjects=Israeli–Palestinian conflict, BBC/Bias
|SeeAlso=
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|publication_date=22 February 2013
|ContentsTitle=A CDA approach to analysing BBC Television’s Newsnight reports on the Israel/Palestine conflict
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|description=Peter Allen's University of Leicester MA dissertation, analysing the bias of the BBC Newsnight program in its reporting of the Israel/Palesine conflict. Although confined to the Newsnight series, it is a telling commentary on the subliminal official narrative nature of BBC News output and that of the Western Corporate media in general.
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|see_also=
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|title=A CDA approach to analysing BBC Television’s Newsnight reports on the Israel/Palestine conflict
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===Absract===
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===Abstract===
This paper sets out to analyse recent BBC Newsnight reports on the Israel/Palestine conflict utilising Fairclough’s approach to Critical Discourse Analysis. The aims of this study are to explore the explanatory power of Fairclough’s three levels of analysis – context, interaction, text – in the light of the criticisms of this approach by Greg Philo of the Glasgow University Media Group (2007); and to attempt to discover whether the results of Philo and Berry’s (2011) study of mainstream news coverage of Israel/Palestine also apply to Newsnight.
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This paper sets out to analyse recent [[BBC]] Newsnight reports on the [[Israel/Palestine conflict]] utilising Fairclough’s approach to Critical Discourse Analysis. The aims of this study are to explore the explanatory power of Fairclough’s three levels of analysis – context, interaction, text – in the light of the criticisms of this approach by [[Greg Philo]] of the [[Glasgow University]] Media Group (2007); and to attempt to discover whether the results of Philo and Berry’s (2011) study of mainstream news coverage of Israel/Palestine also apply to Newsnight.
  
 
The findings suggest that CDA’s three levels of analysis have a considerable amount of explicatory power. In this case, proposing that aspect s of the way that the conflict are reported as revealed by linguistic description
 
The findings suggest that CDA’s three levels of analysis have a considerable amount of explicatory power. In this case, proposing that aspect s of the way that the conflict are reported as revealed by linguistic description
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[[Category:Propaganda]]
 
[[Category:BBC]]
 
[[Category:Doc]]
 
[[Category:Israel]]
 

Latest revision as of 03:26, 5 November 2016

Peter Allen's University of Leicester MA dissertation, analysing the bias of the BBC Newsnight program in its reporting of the Israel/Palesine conflict. Although confined to the Newsnight series, it is a telling commentary on the subliminal official narrative nature of BBC News output and that of the Western Corporate media in general.

Disclaimer (#3)Document.png paper  by Peter Allen dated 22 February 2013
Subjects: Israeli–Palestinian conflict, BBC/Bias
Source: News Unspun (Link)

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A CDA approach to analysing BBC Television’s Newsnight reports on the Israel/Palestine conflict



Abstract

This paper sets out to analyse recent BBC Newsnight reports on the Israel/Palestine conflict utilising Fairclough’s approach to Critical Discourse Analysis. The aims of this study are to explore the explanatory power of Fairclough’s three levels of analysis – context, interaction, text – in the light of the criticisms of this approach by Greg Philo of the Glasgow University Media Group (2007); and to attempt to discover whether the results of Philo and Berry’s (2011) study of mainstream news coverage of Israel/Palestine also apply to Newsnight.

The findings suggest that CDA’s three levels of analysis have a considerable amount of explicatory power. In this case, proposing that aspect s of the way that the conflict are reported as revealed by linguistic description of texts, can be interpreted by reference to the institutional order of discourse (BBC TV news production), and explained in terms of the context of the BBC’s relationship with the state and the UK government’s foreign policy. This research further indicates that a number of Philo and Berry’s findings on the way in which mainstream news programmes report the Israel/Palestine conflict also apply to Newsnight.

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