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Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'./
作者:
Ogude, Helidah Refiloe Atieno.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (223 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-03, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International84-03A.
標題:
Sociology. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=29165472click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9798841750932
Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'.
Ogude, Helidah Refiloe Atieno.
Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'.
- 1 online resource (223 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-03, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The New School, 2022.
Includes bibliographical references
The European 'refugee crisis' has been the site upon which recent mainstream news discourse and policy towards asylum-seekers wishing to enter Europe via 'illegalized' means has been articulated and scrutinized. Most of these asylum-seekers are from Africa and the Middle East. The 'refugee crisis,' therefore, serves as a critical flashpoint; a betraying historical juncture through which we can understand vexed questions about race, racism, and the pernicious colonial vestiges that 'Europe' has vehemently refused to grapple with. This is now manifest in Europe's border regime and the countless known and unknown Black and Brown bodies at sea. This research focuses on the woefully under-researched complex and mutually constitutive relationship between media, public attitudes, and immigration policymaking. It explores this relationship during the height (2013-2016) of what is considered a regime-orchestrated racial crisis. This work analyzes discursive and affective representations of migrant subjects in three of the most widely read U.K. print news publications and immigration policies of the U.K. government, showing that they mutually generated a distinct politics of affect. It visualizes 'affective-racialized networks' using a newly developed methodology that builds on corpus-assisted discourse studies. These formations-which constitute nested webs of words repeatedly used by news media to describe migrant subjects-are ubiquitous and reveal manufactured affective, racialized, and gendered knowledge. In trying to generate public consent to legitimize immigration policies, the thesis contends that the state and media depicted Black African, North African/ 'Arab-Muslim' and Eastern European male migrants as objects of panic, disgust, anger, resentment, fear, and contempt. These affective-racialized networks functioned like economies. They circulated and accumulated spatially and temporally. As such, this thesis advances that the networks contributed to the justification of policy actions by the U.K. government that led to the industrialization of death: the militarization of maritime space, which resulted in the countless unnoticed deaths of predominantly men from the Global South. The applied methodology opens new research avenues for migration, media semiotics, gender, critical race, visuality, and affect scholars that wish to better understand how racialized and affective knowledge is forged, fostered, and enacted by political elites.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2023
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9798841750932Subjects--Topical Terms:
516174
Sociology.
Subjects--Index Terms:
AffectIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'.
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Migrant Representation, Discourses, and Determination the Case of the U.K. at the Height of the European 'Refugee Crisis'.
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Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-03, Section: A.
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The European 'refugee crisis' has been the site upon which recent mainstream news discourse and policy towards asylum-seekers wishing to enter Europe via 'illegalized' means has been articulated and scrutinized. Most of these asylum-seekers are from Africa and the Middle East. The 'refugee crisis,' therefore, serves as a critical flashpoint; a betraying historical juncture through which we can understand vexed questions about race, racism, and the pernicious colonial vestiges that 'Europe' has vehemently refused to grapple with. This is now manifest in Europe's border regime and the countless known and unknown Black and Brown bodies at sea. This research focuses on the woefully under-researched complex and mutually constitutive relationship between media, public attitudes, and immigration policymaking. It explores this relationship during the height (2013-2016) of what is considered a regime-orchestrated racial crisis. This work analyzes discursive and affective representations of migrant subjects in three of the most widely read U.K. print news publications and immigration policies of the U.K. government, showing that they mutually generated a distinct politics of affect. It visualizes 'affective-racialized networks' using a newly developed methodology that builds on corpus-assisted discourse studies. These formations-which constitute nested webs of words repeatedly used by news media to describe migrant subjects-are ubiquitous and reveal manufactured affective, racialized, and gendered knowledge. In trying to generate public consent to legitimize immigration policies, the thesis contends that the state and media depicted Black African, North African/ 'Arab-Muslim' and Eastern European male migrants as objects of panic, disgust, anger, resentment, fear, and contempt. These affective-racialized networks functioned like economies. They circulated and accumulated spatially and temporally. As such, this thesis advances that the networks contributed to the justification of policy actions by the U.K. government that led to the industrialization of death: the militarization of maritime space, which resulted in the countless unnoticed deaths of predominantly men from the Global South. The applied methodology opens new research avenues for migration, media semiotics, gender, critical race, visuality, and affect scholars that wish to better understand how racialized and affective knowledge is forged, fostered, and enacted by political elites.
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