TY - JOUR
T1 - 'Reporting 'African gangs': Theorising journalistic practice during a multi-mediated moral panic
AU - Koumouris, Gregory
AU - Blaustein, Jarrett
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This article uses Bourdieusian field theory to examine how journalistic practices contributed to a multi-mediated moral panic about African gangs in Melbourne, Australia. Empirical insight is supplied via interviews with journalists who identified traditional media outlets as secondary definers that amplified and legitimised this racialised threat construction. Participants attributed the intense and sensationalised media coverage to the political climate, the newsworthiness of racialised folk devils, and the economic and technological transformation of the journalistic field. These transformations were perceived to have negatively influenced journalistic standards by incentivising the efficient production of commodifiable content. Participants described how these structural changes were filtered through the social personalities of different news outlets; they shaped, and were reproduced through, distinct managerial cultures, editorial routines and journalistic habitus. The emergent nomos (rules of the game) was perceived to constrain the autonomy of journalists, particularly those lacking cultural capital, and limit opportunities for contestation of the African gangs narrative. Journalists seemingly adapted by engaging in practices which reflected their attempts to negotiate these conditions and establish coherent narrative identities. In some cases, this entailed the neutralisation of what journalists recognised as ethically questionably reporting practices.
AB - This article uses Bourdieusian field theory to examine how journalistic practices contributed to a multi-mediated moral panic about African gangs in Melbourne, Australia. Empirical insight is supplied via interviews with journalists who identified traditional media outlets as secondary definers that amplified and legitimised this racialised threat construction. Participants attributed the intense and sensationalised media coverage to the political climate, the newsworthiness of racialised folk devils, and the economic and technological transformation of the journalistic field. These transformations were perceived to have negatively influenced journalistic standards by incentivising the efficient production of commodifiable content. Participants described how these structural changes were filtered through the social personalities of different news outlets; they shaped, and were reproduced through, distinct managerial cultures, editorial routines and journalistic habitus. The emergent nomos (rules of the game) was perceived to constrain the autonomy of journalists, particularly those lacking cultural capital, and limit opportunities for contestation of the African gangs narrative. Journalists seemingly adapted by engaging in practices which reflected their attempts to negotiate these conditions and establish coherent narrative identities. In some cases, this entailed the neutralisation of what journalists recognised as ethically questionably reporting practices.
U2 - 10.1177%2F1741659021991205
DO - 10.1177%2F1741659021991205
M3 - Article
VL - 18
SP - 105
EP - 125
JO - Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal
JF - Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal
IS - 1
ER -