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En‘vision’ing Europe's crisis: Intertextuality in news coverage of the Eurozone crisis in Chinese, Indian and Russian press

journal contribution
posted on 2015-02-18, 11:17 authored by Natalia Chaban, Jessica Bain, Serena Kelly
European political communication studies are marked by a lack of attention to the visual. Yet there is a need to go beyond strictly textual analyses towards an understanding that visual images also play an important role in constructing a European Union (EU) identity both within and outside the Union's borders. This analysis explores the relationship between visual and textual imagery of the EU in international news discourses; a comprehensive intertextual approach which remains an under-researched perspective in studies of visual imagery in general. The study focuses on the intertextual imagery of the EU and its economic crisis in three ‘emerging’ powers; China, India and Russia. The three states are among the main poles in a multi-polar world – an emerging order characterized by power shifts and increased interdependence. In this new global design, the ‘emerging’ powers compete with the EU and USA, and contemplate their own responses to the EU's economic crisis, as well as calculate its effects. This study explores those responses as presented in the leading business papers of each country and asks how the relationship between the visual and textual imagery of the EU contributes to raising visibility and creating cognitive and emotional responses to its on-going crisis

Funding

The research presented in this paper derives from the project: After Lisbon: The EU as an Exporter of Values and Norms through ASEM (2010–2012) funded by the Jean Monnet Lifelong Learning Programme Multilateral Research Grant awarded by the Directorate General of Education and Culture, European Commission.

History

Citation

The Journal of International Communication, 2014, 20 (1), pp. 1-20 (19)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Media and Communication

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

The Journal of International Communication

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge), Macquarie University, Department of International Communication

issn

1321-6597

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2015-09-24

Publisher version

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13216597.2014.896268

Editors

Chitty, N.

Language

en

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