2015
DOI: 10.1177/1329878x1515500104
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Constructing the Nation Every Night: Hegemonic Formations in Today Tonight and A Current Affair

Abstract: Political articulations of identities and the nation occur both through the demands of the commercial current affairs format and the journalistic use of textual elements. The tabloid format engages in processes of politicising divergent cultural identities through the appeal to mass Australia. Indeed, the particular feature of ethnic individuals in content provides a hegemonic formation through which the ‘nation’ can be articulated. This article draws upon the discursive hegemony of Laclau and Mouffe to delibe… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Aly, 2007; Ewart et al, 2017). In Australia, representations of individuals from diverse ethnic or religious backgrounds in current affairs content tend to be in relation to the dominant Anglo-Australian culture through discourses of incompatibility (Muscat, 2015). Pertinently, Islamophobic sentiment in media representations and popular discourse functions as a ‘new’ form of racism based upon notions of cultural incompatibility, but still relies on visual forms of identification and appeals to notions of Whiteness (cf.…”
Section: Mediating Race and Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aly, 2007; Ewart et al, 2017). In Australia, representations of individuals from diverse ethnic or religious backgrounds in current affairs content tend to be in relation to the dominant Anglo-Australian culture through discourses of incompatibility (Muscat, 2015). Pertinently, Islamophobic sentiment in media representations and popular discourse functions as a ‘new’ form of racism based upon notions of cultural incompatibility, but still relies on visual forms of identification and appeals to notions of Whiteness (cf.…”
Section: Mediating Race and Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%