Discriminatory news discourse: some Hong Kong data
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2002
Keywords
China, Discriminatory discourse, Discriminatory practices, Discursive practices, Hong Kong, Ideology, Media discourse
DOI
10.1177/0957926502013003052
Abstract
This article analyses the discriminatory discursive practices of one leading liberal Hong Kong newspaper, the South China Morning Post, with a view to examining to what extent they mirror those found in the literature (which to date has focused primarily on Europe). The data for the study consist of 80 articles concerning one news event, Chinese Mainlanders claiming the right-of-abode in Hong Kong during the period 30 January 1999 to 19 August 2000. A review of the rather diffuse literature leads to the development of a composite taxonomy of discriminatory discursive practices. The Hong Kong data are then tested against this taxonomy. Examples of all of the strategies in the taxonomy are found to be present in the Hong Kong data, with certain local variations due to the particular situation of Hong Kong. The findings are all the more striking because the people who are the focus of the discrimination are from the same ethnic and linguistic background. In contrast to the news stories, a comparison with the editorials on the right-of-abode issue in the South China Morning Post reveals a much more liberal tone in the latter. This raises the question as to whether it is the news stories or the editorials that represent the true institutional ideology of this influential Hong Kong newspaper.
Source Publication
Discourse Society
Volume Number
13
Issue Number
3
ISSN
0957-9265
First Page
319
Last Page
345
Recommended Citation
Flowerdew, J.,Li, D.,& Tran, Y. (2002). Discriminatory news discourse: some Hong Kong data. Discourse Society, 13 (3), 319-345. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957926502013003052