Representation of older adults in Turkish newspaper reports during the COVID-19 pandemic

被引:1
作者
Course, Simla [1 ]
Koc, Fatma Seyma
Saka, Fatma Ozlem [1 ]
机构
[1] Akdeniz Univ, English Language Teaching Dept, Antalya, Turkiye
关键词
Critical discourse analysis; Ageism; Older adults; COVID-19; Newspaper reports; Systemic functional grammar; TRANSITIVITY ANALYSIS; RESPONSIBILITY; STEREOTYPE; HISTORY; AGEISM;
D O I
10.1016/j.jaging.2024.101232
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学]; R592 [老年病学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100203 ; 100602 ;
摘要
This research investigates the representation of older adults in Turkish newspaper reports during the first national lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey in order to understand the representation and reinforcement of ageism in this context. To this end, fifty newspaper reports from five top-selling Turkish newspapers at the time were selected randomly and analysed using critical discourse analysis for the text producers' linguistic choices in the representations of older adults. The findings show that the older adults were represented predominantly in relation to the lockdown measures and as members of a homogeneous group. They were mainly evaluated negatively as a vulnerable, passive, and at risk group who lacked truthfulness and exhibited unusual behaviour. They were also found to be not among the intended readers of the newspaper reports. This resulted in the infantilisation of older adults and the removal of their agency. Our findings point to the linguistic choices realising these discursive practices in the Turkish context. We argue that these findings follow a trend of representation of older adults in discursive practices and that these practices are instrumental in forming ageist stereotypes and reinforcing age-related bias.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 63 条
[1]   "It's Pure Panic": The Portrayal of Residential Care in American Newspapers During COVID-19 [J].
Allen, Laura D. ;
Ayalon, Liat .
GERONTOLOGIST, 2021, 61 (01) :86-97
[2]   A critical gerontological framing analysis of persistent ageism in NZ online news media: Don't call us "elderly"! [J].
Amundsen, Diana .
JOURNAL OF AGING STUDIES, 2022, 61
[3]   "Justice demands that you find this man not guilty": A transitivity analysis of the closing arguments of a rape case that resulted in a wrongful convictionPALABRAS CLAVES [J].
Bartley, Leanne Victoria .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS, 2018, 28 (03) :480-495
[4]   The Consequences of Ageist Language are upon us [J].
Berridge, Clara ;
Hooyman, Nancy .
JOURNAL OF GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIAL WORK, 2020, 63 (6-7) :508-512
[5]   Risky Business: How Older 'At Risk' People in Denmark Evaluated their Situated Risk During the COVID-19 Pandemic [J].
Clotworthy, Amy ;
Westendorp, Rudi G. J. .
ANTHROPOLOGY & AGING, 2020, 41 (02) :167-176
[6]   This old stereotype: The pervasiveness and persistence of the elderly stereotype [J].
Cuddy, AJC ;
Norton, MI ;
Fiske, ST .
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES, 2005, 61 (02) :267-285
[7]  
Dreyfus S, 2017, DISCOURSE SOC, V28, P374, DOI 10.1177/0957926517703222
[8]  
Fairclough N., 2003, Analysing Discourse. Textual analysis for social research
[9]  
Fairclough N., 1989, Language and Power
[10]  
Fairclough N., 1995, CRITICAL DISCOURSE A, DOI DOI 10.4324/9781315834368