Legitimization strategies in China's official media: the 2018 vaccine scandal in China

被引:23
|
作者
Wang, Guofeng [1 ]
机构
[1] Shanghai Normal Univ, Coll Foreign Languages, Shanghai, Peoples R China
关键词
Legitimization; legitimization strategies; ideology; China; official media; vaccine scandal; DISCOURSE; LEGITIMATION;
D O I
10.1080/10350330.2020.1766262
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Control of public discourse in China by official media has been the subject of several media-related studies. Few studies have been conducted, however, on the specific discourse strategies employed to exercise control. Based on Van Leeuwen's ([2007. "Legitimation in Discourse and Communication." Discourse and Communication 1 (1): 91-112]) and Reyes' ([2011. "Strategies of Legitimization in Political Discourse: From Words to Actions." Discourse and Society 22 (6): 781-807]) categories of legitimization, this study identifies five legitimization strategies of China's official media: legitimization through highlighting positive governmental actions, emotions, rationality, hypothetical futures, and quoting elites. This study uses reports of the 2018 vaccine scandal in China published by Xinhua News Agency as examples to show how a top-down perspective is adopted to legitimize the ruling party and sustain social stability in a crisis. This is done in the hope of contributing not only to a better understanding of how legitimization is realized in practice in the sociopolitical context of an authoritarian society, but also to a deeper insight into the nature of China's official media discourse. Of the five strategies, legitimization through emphasizing the government's positive actions sets the tone for official news discourse; the other four serve to provide information and solve problems in the interest of the ruling party.
引用
收藏
页码:685 / 698
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] China's media, media's China.
    Zhu, JH
    JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 1997, 47 (04) : 157 - 164
  • [12] From vice to virtue: changing portrayals of minorities in China's official media
    Hoddie, Matthew
    Lou, Diqing
    ASIAN ETHNICITY, 2009, 10 (01) : 51 - 69
  • [13] China's media, media's China - Lee,CC
    Cheek, T
    PACIFIC AFFAIRS, 1997, 70 (01) : 114 - 116
  • [14] Understanding China's official statistics
    Xu, Xianchun
    CHINA ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2013, 6 (2-3) : 63 - 79
  • [15] China's melamine milk scandal continues
    不详
    TCE, 2010, (825): : 11 - 11
  • [16] Vaccine safety and social media in China
    Fung, Isaac Chun-Hai
    Cheung, Chi-Ngai
    Fu, King-Wa
    Ip, Patrick
    Tse, Zion Tsz Ho
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INFECTION CONTROL, 2016, 44 (10) : 1194 - 1195
  • [17] Has the public lost confidence in vaccines because of a vaccine scandal in China
    Han, Bingfeng
    Wang, Shuai
    Wan, Yongmei
    Liu, Jiang
    Zhao, Tianshuo
    Cui, Jiahao
    Zhuang, Hui
    Cui, Fuqiang
    VACCINE, 2019, 37 (36) : 5270 - 5275
  • [18] China vaccine scandal: investigations begin into faulty rabies and DTaP shots
    Murphy, Flynn
    BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2018, 362 : k3244
  • [19] China's Newsmakers: Official Media Coverage and Political Shifts in the Xi Jinping Era
    Jaros, Kyle
    Pan, Jennifer
    CHINA QUARTERLY, 2018, 233 : 111 - 136
  • [20] Digital populism in an authoritarian context: A discourse analysis of the legitimization of the Belt and Road Initiative by China's party media
    Cao, Le
    Qiaoan, Runya
    COMMUNICATION REVIEW, 2023, : 350 - 389