Allen R, Nairn R G
Auckland Healthcare, New Zealand.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 1997 Jun;31(3):375-81. doi: 10.3109/00048679709073847.
To explore how the commonsense understanding, that those with a mental illness are dangerous, is deployed in a small sample of print media.
The print media sample was subjected to a discourse analysis informed by knowledge of media practices. Materials were read closely and references to mental illness were identified, classified and analysed.
This non-sensational material was shown to provide repeated confirmations of the commonsense understanding that mental illnesses make people unpredictable and dangerous. Close study of the lead article suggested that it was written so that readers had to draw on such understandings to make sense of the account it presented.
The study challenges the notion that media present negative depictions of mental illnesses either because journalists are poorly informed or because 'sensation sells'. It is concluded that media practices directed at engaging readers require the use of cases and a style of writing that forces readers to draw upon commonsense knowledge of mental illness to understand the text. It is argued that this is a deliberate effort to enlist readers as co-creators of the text and thereby increase their interest.
探讨“患有精神疾病的人很危险”这一常识性认知在一小部分印刷媒体中是如何呈现的。
对印刷媒体样本进行基于媒体实践知识的话语分析。仔细阅读材料,识别、分类并分析对精神疾病的提及。
这些非耸人听闻的材料反复证实了“精神疾病会使人变得不可预测且危险”这一常识性认知。对头条文章的仔细研究表明,其撰写方式使得读者必须借助此类认知才能理解所呈现的内容。
该研究对以下观点提出了挑战,即媒体呈现对精神疾病的负面描述要么是因为记者了解不足,要么是因为“耸人听闻能卖钱”。研究得出结论,旨在吸引读者的媒体实践需要运用案例以及一种写作风格,这种风格迫使读者利用对精神疾病的常识性知识来理解文本。有人认为,这是一种有意的努力,旨在让读者成为文本的共同创作者,从而提高他们的兴趣。