Abstract

The lifting of work restrictions for Romanian and Bulgarian citizens in the EU, in January 2014, encountered much resistance both in European political discourse and the media, as these migrants became demonised and presented as social and economic threats. In this article, we show how the Romanian press dealt with such discriminatory discourses against the Romanian migrants. We conduct a thorough Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA) of news items published in Romanian press, prior to the lifting of work restrictions, and we argue that the Roma emerged as the perfect scapegoats that could explain the deviant and unruly behaviours ascribed by some western media to ‘Romanians’. We also show how racism toward the Roma, referred here as Romaphobia, invokes non-racial practices and instead builds on a reverse victimhood narrative. Such discourses relate in a broader sense to well-established discursive practices in Romanian context but also to the political climate across Europe which is marked by increased intolerance toward the Roma. It is the mixture of stereotypical discourses and populist rhetoric that makes racism towards the Roma appear naturalised and increasingly more difficult to challenge.

Highlights

  • Romania’s accession to the European Union was both a time for celebration and turmoil

  • Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA) is instrumental in the cases we present in this paper, as it helps us show what are the main discourses in relation to the Roma in Romanian press at this particular time

  • The negative characteristics initially ascribed to Romanian migrants by Paris Match are redirected towards the Roma, as we will see in the extract and this is recontextualised through discursive additions and evaluations as we show in Extract 2

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Summary

Introduction

Romania’s accession to the European Union was both a time for celebration and turmoil. It acquainted the public with a problematic community, similar to the UKIP’s depictions, or as Romanian media argue, it provided an image that was conflated with that of the Roma (Stanca, 2015). These characteristics invoke the focus on the nation (the Romanian people), an antielite discourse against corrupt politicians and the media who appear to be non-transparent and overlook the interest of the Romanians, and the division of the society into ‘us’ and ‘them’ It is in this context that we place this specific media analysis, a context where ethnic minorities, such as the Roma become easy scapegoats for all societal frustrations, especially for the injustices suffered by Romanian migrants in the EU

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