Abstract

The objective of this study is to examine the linguistic representation of social actors in the selected Malaysian and foreign news reports on the circulated event of the missing MAS flight MH370. Despite extensive studies of news discourse, less attention is paid on how news event are speculated and the extent the social actors are relegated. Hence, the study explores the role of newspaper editorials in promoting stereotypical depictions through the representation of self- and other- in their reporting of the MH370 tragedy. The study retrieved a total of fifty (50) news reports of the missing MAS flight MH370 incident from ten news press, twenty-five (25) published by five local (Malaysian) English newsagents: The Star, New Straits Times, Sun Daily, Malaysian Insider and Malaysiakini, and twenty-five (25) others from five foreign newsagents: Daily Mail (UK), The Guardian (UK), Washington Post, New York Times and USA Today. The corpora were collected from March 8, 2014, to November 5, 2014, and analysed using Van Dijk’s (1998) Ideological Square framework, as well as Reisigl and Wodak (2000) Discursive Strategies. The analysis of this study discovers evidence of the “intergroup bias” made by the selected news press in representing the MH370 social actors. The selected news press displays an overt preference for own group and obvious demotion of the other group. The study also reveals the occurrence of lexicalization of the ‘other’ in the foreign news reports indicating positive representation of their in-group and exhibiting apparent disapproval of the actions by the out-group. On the other hand, the analysis also reveals an impartial representation of the MH370 social actor by the local news press both for in-group and out-group.

Highlights

  • News has been one of the main means of information transfer, given that today’s societies are greatly occupied by the give-and-take of daily news

  • The analysis reveals great manifestation of actor description, lexicalisation, polarization and victimization of Van Dijk’s Ideological Square in the overall representation of the MH370 social actors

  • Lexicalisation of the “other” in the foreign news press revealed their positive representation of the in-group and prominent displays of the out-group’s (Malaysian government) deceiving actions is an act to provide a legitimation towards the out-group’s incapacity in handling the aviation incident

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Summary

Introduction

News has been one of the main means of information transfer, given that today’s societies are greatly occupied by the give-and-take of daily news. Many current news media enact a vital role of sculpting the perception of public opinion through speculation, assumption, theorisation, or presupposition This has become one of the major concerns in the field of journalism. Befitting to the power of modern information societies, news media is held responsible for prevailing discourses and seemed as the most influential form of public discourse. News media representations, both national and international, reporting the incident of missing flight MH370 have been distorted from sympathy to blame, and the sudden emergence of conspiracy theories among the social actors involved worthy of a Hollywood screenplay. It is the commonly found issue seen in numerous works of literature on the news media accounts which is concerned with the lack of neutral reporting

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