Mapping national news reports on COVID-19 in Australia: Topics, sources and imagined audiences

Kate Holland, Monique Lewis

    Research output: A Conference proceeding or a Chapter in BookChapterpeer-review

    4 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    News media across the world have played an important role in contributing to public discourse about the COVID-19 pandemic, including the actions being taken by governments to prevent and contain its spread and the role of citizens in the public health response. In this chapter, we analyse news reporting on the pandemic in The Australian newspaper and ABC News Online in Australia between February and August 2020. Our constructed week sampling approach examined news reports across 24 days with particular attention to the topics and sources included in the coverage and the ways in which audiences were addressed in the stories. Conceptually, we take as our starting point Briggs and Hallin’s framework of ‘biomediatisation’ and three predominant models of ‘biocommunicability’ that they identify in health news: biomedical authority, patient-consumer, and public sphere. These models variously position social actors in active or passive roles in relation to the flow of health information. Our analysis explores the presence of these models in news coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and whether or not adaptations or new models are better suited to capture some of the particular characteristics of this profoundly mediatised pandemic.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationCommunicating COVID-19
    Subtitle of host publicationInterdisciplinary Perspectives
    EditorsMonique Lewis, Eliza Govender, Kate Holland
    Place of PublicationSwitzerland
    PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
    Chapter4
    Pages59-81
    Number of pages23
    Volume1
    ISBN (Electronic)9783030797355
    ISBN (Print)9783030797348
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 7 Oct 2021

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