Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Spaces of exclusion: The visual construction of Australian borders and the asylum seeker subject in television news reports of the 2013 Australian Federal Election Cover

Spaces of exclusion: The visual construction of Australian borders and the asylum seeker subject in television news reports of the 2013 Australian Federal Election

Open Access
|Apr 2020

References

  1. Anderson, B 1991, Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism, Verso, London.
  2. Andrejevic, M 2011, “Securitainment’ in the post-9/11 era’, Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, vol. 25, pp. 165-175.
  3. Bal, M 2009, Narratology: introduction to the theory of narrative, University of Toronto Press, Toronto.
  4. Bednarek, M & Caple, H 2012, News discourse, Continuum International Publishing, London.
  5. Billig, M 1995, Banal Nationalism, SAGE Publications Ltd, London.
  6. Biocca, F 2014, Television and Political Advertising, Taylor and Francis, Hoboken.
  7. Bleiker, R, Campbell, D, Hutchison, E & Nicholson, X 2013, ‘The visual dehumanisation of refugees’, Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 398-416.
  8. Bock, MA 2009, ‘Who’s minding the gate? Pool feeds, video subsidies, and political images’, The International Journal of Press/Politics, vol. 14, pp. 257-278.
  9. Bowcher, W & Royce, TD 2013, New directions in the analysis of multimodal discourse, Taylor and Francis, Abingdon & Oxon.
  10. Burke, A 2008, Fear of Security, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  11. Butler, J 2009, Frames of War: When is life Grievable?, Verso, London.
  12. Capdevila, R & Callaghan, JE 2008, ‘‘It’s not racist. It’s common sense’. A critical analysis of political discourse around asylum and immigration in the UK’, Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, vol. 18, pp. 1-16.
  13. Chambers, P 2015, ‘The embrace of border security: maritime jurisdiction, national sovereignty, and the geopolitics of operation sovereign borders’, Geopolitics, vol. 20, pp. 404-437.
  14. Chambers, PC 2012, Power in transformation: Christmas Island, border security, governance, PhD, University of Melbourne.
  15. Chouliaraki, L 2006, Towards an analytics of mediation, Critical Discourse Studies, vol. 3, pp. 153-178.
  16. Couldry, N & Hepp, A 1999, ‘Conceptualizing mediatization: contexts, traditions, arguments’, Communication Theory, vol. 23, pp. 191-202.
  17. Dancygier, B. S., JOSE; Vandelanotte, Lieven (ed.) 2012. Textual Choices in Discourse, Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
  18. Dechent, S 2014, ‘Operation sovereign borders: the very real risk of refoulement of refugees’, Alternative Law Journal, vol. 39, p. 110.
  19. Denemark, D, Ward, I & Bean, C 2007, ‘Election campaigns and television news coverage: the case of the 2001 Australian election’, Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 42, pp. 89-109.
  20. Dorr, N, Elcioglu, EF & Gaydos, L 2014, ‘‘Welcome to the Border’: National Geographic’s Border Wars and the Naturalization of Border Militarization’, Working USA, vol. 17, pp. 45-60.
  21. Fairclough, N 2013, Critical discourse analysis, Taylor and Francis, Hoboken.
  22. Fairclough, N 2012, Political discourse analysis: a method for advanced students, Taylor & Francis, Hoboken.
  23. Feng, D 2016, ‘Identifying the participants: reference in television news’, Visual Communication, vol. 15, pp. 167-198.
  24. Fiske, J 2011, Television Culture, Routledge, New York.
  25. Gale, P 2004, ‘The refugee crisis and fear: populist politics and media discourse’, The Journal of Sociology, vol. 40, pp. 321-340.
  26. Grabe, ME & Bucy, EP 2009, Image bite politics news and the visual framing of elections, Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York.
  27. Graham, S 2010, Cities under seige: the new military urbanism, Verso, London.
  28. Graham, S 2012, ‘When life itself is war: on the urbanization of military and security doctrine’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, vol. 36, pp. 136-155.
  29. Hansen, A & Machin, D 2013, Media communication and research methods, Palgrave Macmillan, New York.
  30. Herman, D 2007, The Cambridge companion to narrative, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  31. Herman, D, Jahn, M & Ryan, ML 2004, Routledge encyclopedia of narrative theory, Taylor and Francis, London.
  32. Hodge, P 2015, ‘A grievable life? The criminalisation and securing of asylum seeker bodies in the ‘violent frames’ of Australia’s Operation Sovereign Borders’, Geoforum, vol. 58, pp. 122-131.
  33. Hughes, P 2010, ‘Governmentality, blurred boundaries, and pleasure in the docusoap Border Security’, Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, vol. 24, pp. 439-449.
  34. Jefferis, DC 2013, ‘Battlefield borders, threat rhetoric, and the militarization of state and local law enforcement’, National Security Law Brief, vol. 3, pp. 37-73.
  35. Jewitt, C, Bezemer, J & O’Halloran 2016, Introducing multimodality, Routledge, London & New York.
  36. Johnson, C, Wanna, J & Hsu-ann, L 2015, Abbott’s gambit. The 2013 Australian Federal Election, [S.l.], ANU Press.
  37. Jones, J & Peccei, JS 2003, ‘Language and politics’, in I Singh & JS Peccei (eds), Language, society and power: an introduction, Routledge, London & New York.
  38. Kaufer, D, Parry-Giles, SJ & Klebanov, BB 2012, ‘The “image bite”, political language, and the public/private divide, Journal of Language & Politics, vol. 11, pp. 336-356.
  39. Koga-Browes, S 2015, ‘Camera angles in television news: designed to communicate?’, in R Piazza, L Haarman & A Caborn (eds), Values and choices in television discourse: a view from both sides of the screen, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.
  40. Kress, G & Van Leeuwen, T 2001, Multimodal discourse: the modes and media of contemporary communication, Edward Arnold, London.
  41. Lianos, M 2013, Dangerous others, insecure societies, Ashgate Publishing Ltd, Farnham.
  42. Machin, D & Jaworski, A 2006, Archive video footage in news: creating a likeness and index of the phenomenal world, Visual Communication, 5, pp. 345-366.
  43. Machin, D & Mayr, A 2012, How to do critical discourse analysis: a multimodal introduction, SAGE Publications, London.
  44. McNair, B, Flew, T, Harrington, S & Swift, A 2017, Politics, media and democracy in Australia: public and producer perceptions of the political public sphere, Taylor and Francis, London.
  45. Meyer, M 2009, Between theory, method and politics: positioning of the approaches to CDA, in R Wodak & M Meyer (eds), Methods of critical discourse analysis, SAGE Publications, London.
  46. Montgomery, M 2007, The discourse of broadcast news, Routledge, London.
  47. O’Doherty, K & Augoustinos, M 2008, Protecting the nation: nationalist rhetoric on asylum seekers and the Tampa, Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, vol. 18, pp. 576-592.
  48. Phelan, J 2007, ‘Rhetoric/ethics’ in, D Herman (ed.), The Cambridge companion to narrative, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  49. Price, S 2013, Worst-case scenario?:Governance, mediation and the security regime, Zed Books Ltd, London.
  50. Puckett, K 2016, Narrative theory: a critical introduction, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  51. Richardson, JE & Wodak, R 2009, ‘The impact of visual racism: visual arguments in political leaflets of Austrian and British far-right parties’, Controversia, vol. 6, pp. 45-77.
  52. Schubert, TW 2005, Your highness: vertical positions as perceptual symbols of power. Journal Of Personality And Social Psychology, 89, 1-21.
  53. Schuster, L 2003, ‘Common sense or racism? The treatment of asylum-seekers in Europe’, Patterns of Prejudice, vol. 37, pp. 233-256.
  54. Smit, JH 2010, ‘Malcolm Fraser’s response to ‘commercial’ refugee voyages’, Journal of International Relations, vol. 8, pp. 97-103.
  55. Thornborrow, J 2003, ‘Language and the Media’, in Singh, I & Peccei, JS (eds), Language, society and power: an introduction, 2nd edn, Routledge, London & New York.
  56. Toolan, M 2012, Narrative: a critical linguistic introduction, Routledge, New York.
  57. UNHCR 2011, States Parties to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, available http://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/3b73b0d63.pdf
  58. Van Dijk, TA 2013, Discourse studies: a multidisciplinary approach, Sage Publications, London.
  59. Van Dijk, TA 2006, ‘Discourse and manipulation’, Discourse & Society, vol. 17, pp. 359-383.
  60. Vogl, A 2015, ‘Over the borderline: a critical inquiry into the geography of territorial excision and the securitisation of the Australian border’, University of New South Wales Law Journal, vol. 38, pp. 114-145.
  61. Waldinger, R & Fitzgerald, D 2004, ‘Transnationalism in question 1’, American Journal of Sociology, vol. 109, pp. 1177-1195.
  62. Wang, J 2014, ‘Criticising images: critical discourse analysis of visual semiosis in picture news’, Critical Arts: A South-North Journal of Cultural & Media Studies, vol. 28, pp. 264-286.
  63. Wilson, D 2014, Border militarization, technology and crime control, in S Pickering & J Ham, (eds), The Routledge handbook on crime and international migration, Routledge, Oxon & New York.
  64. Wodak, R & Meyer, M (eds) 2009, Methods of critical discourse analysis, Sage, London.
  65. Yamamoto, R 2007, ‘Constructing collective offenderhood: the foreign criminality discourse in contemporary Japan’, Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, August 11, New York, New York City.
Language: English
Page range: 85 - 115
Published on: Apr 17, 2020
Published by: Sciendo
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 times per year

© 2020 Leicha Stewart, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.