DOCUMENT
Witnessing or Mediating Distant Suffering? Academia.doc (104.5 kB)
DOCUMENT
Witnessing or Mediating Distant Suffering_ Academia.pdf (205.08 kB)
1/0
"witnessing" or "mediating" distant suffering? ethical questions across moments of text, production, and reception
journal contribution
posted on 2015-09-29, 10:57 authored by Jonacthan C. OngThis article identifies that the current literature on "distant suffering" lacks a nuanced account of the relationship between televised representations of suffering and the audiences that encounter these in their everyday lives. Text-centered studies overemphasize how news narratives cause compassion fatigue, while audience-centered studies enumerate audience responses with inadequate references to the textual elements and social factors that shape these responses. While recent theorizations about "media witnessing" have provided a guidepost in thinking about the ethical consequences of showing and seeing suffering in the media, it however obscures the normative from the descriptive and universalizes the experience of the "witness" it speaks about. To address these gaps and develop a holistic approach to examine televised suffering, the article proposes the use of mediation theory to account for the distinct ethical questions that arise from the specific "moments" of mediation and how they should altogether inform the ethical critique of media. © The Author(s) 2012.
History
Citation
Television and New Media, 2014, 15 (3), pp. 179-196Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Media and CommunicationVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Television and New MediaPublisher
SAGE Publicationsissn
1527-4764eissn
1552-8316Copyright date
2012Available date
2015-09-29Publisher DOI
Publisher version
http://tvn.sagepub.com/content/15/3/179Language
enAdministrator link
Usage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedLicence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC