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- W867061780 abstract "A square not like the othersTwo weeks along, in January 2012, the Universitatii Square in Bucharest was, once again, the scene of a long series of protests, like 22 years before, in December 1989 (fall of Nicolae Ceausescu regime) or in May-June 1990 (when protests have been stopped by the violent miners' descent).Started as a solidarity meeting with the deputy State Secretary at the Ministry of Health, Raed Arafat, dismissed after a public conflict with the president Traian Basescu, Universitatii Square protests have finally forced the Prime minister in charge at that time to resign.Since 1990, several attempts of the political forces to occupy this space reserved to openly express civic opinions, have felt. Even in January 2012 political personalities who appeared among protesters haven't been welcomed. The message was that Universitatii Square was not for politicians, a reconfirmation of the symbolic power of this place. This symbolic power is not unique if we consider, for example, the Independence Square in Kiev (scene of the Orange Revolution between 2004-2005) or, more recently, Taksim Square in Istanbul where the civic platform opposed to the urban development plan for Gezi Park has the same name as the Square: Taksim Solidarity Movement.In a research published in 1996 in Reseaux, Mihai Coman (1997, p. 13-29) proposed an interpretation of the Romanian media about the 1990 Universitatii Square protests using the symbolic anthropology tools: ritual, liminality, communitas. 22 years later, a similar phenomenon monopolized once again media attention. The current study builds a dialogue in time with this particular media analysis, using a similar interpretation grid.The author will analyze how 2012 Universitatii Square protests were reflected in two Romanian daily newspapers (print copy and online) - Jurnalul national (The National Journal) and Evenimentul Zilei (The Event of the Day), with two opposed political orientations in a very polarized media environment. When reporting about an event with political implications, every daily newspaper covering depends on its partisanship. This is what is happening in the case of January 2012 protests, with very different media coverage by daily newspapers as Evenimentul Zilei, Romania libera (Free Romania) and Adevarul (The Truth, with pro governmental sympathies) and by Jurnalul national (closed to the opposition).In order to have a balanced image of the media coverage, the author choose to analyze one daily newspaper close to the government - Evenimentul Zilei, and another one closed to the opposition - Jurnalul natbnal. The study's corpus is composed by articles published in the two daily newspaper from 13 January 2014 (when protests begin in Universitatii Square) and till the subject is no longer a news for the two newspapers, precisely 5 February for Jurnalul natbnal and 28 January for Evenimentul Zilei.In a context when analysts are talking about postmodern aspects in the media targeting lesser a rational reader and information consumer and more his or her emotional resources, the author is trying to investigate mechanism employed by media when they are not providing a strictly informational coverage but an event reconstruction focusing on the spectacular aspect and on the generalized infotainment (Frumusani 2009, p. 176).The current study's research hypothesis is that the 2012 Piata Universitatii Square is an event characterized by liminality (Turner 1969) favorable to use symbolic and mythological constructions in media discourse. The objective is to identify these symbolic constructions.The author proposes a media analysis using an analytical grid focusing on the actors' definition and the reality's definition and trying to underline semantic structures and make explicit implications, presuppositions, connections, strategies, etc., which usually remain implicit in the discourse (Van Dijk 1983, p. …" @default.
- W867061780 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W867061780 date "2015-01-01" @default.
- W867061780 modified "2023-10-18" @default.
- W867061780 title "Symbolic Constructions in the Media Discourse: Bucharest, Universitatii Square Protests, 22 Years After" @default.
- W867061780 hasPublicationYear "2015" @default.
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