1 Power and the News Media
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Power and the news media
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- ATTITUDES AND IDEOLOGIES
KNOWLEDGE
If news understanding or mental model building is a function of general, socially shared knowledge, then control of such knowledge may indi- rectly control understanding. Thus, if the news media and those political or other elites that have access to it do not provide detailed information about the interests of the United States or other Western countries in the Middle East, the readers knowledge, and hence their understanding of the news about the Gulf War, may be limited. Indeed, it may well be in the best interests of these elites that such public understanding be mini- mal. Similarly, it would also be in their best interests if the public does not have access to other means of communication that provide necessary background knowledge, hence, the well-known marginalization of radi- cal media or oppositional experts and the pervasiveness of disinforma- tion campaigns on the Gulf War as well as about other more or less overt wars in which elite nations are involved. Note though that the influence of such campaigns on the knowledge of the public is complex and far from straightforward: Effective credibility strategies, such as the use of statistics, authoritative sources, credible eyewitnesses, photographs, and other means that persuasively suggest the truth of claims are needed. ATTITUDES AND IDEOLOGIES The strategic control of knowledge is a crucial element in the control of discourse understanding and, therefore, of discourse access and the criti- cal counterpower of oppositional reading and understanding. Beyond knowledge, however, there are other crucial forms of what is now gener- ally called social cognition, 12 such as the schemata of socially shared opinions traditionally known as attitudes. 13 Whereas control of knowl- edge influences understanding, control of attitudes influences evaluation. Acceptance of a war against Iraq, as well as of the Cold War against the Political Communication in Action 16 Communists before that, crucially depends on their legitimacy and justi- fication, which in turn depends on the ways the enemy and its actions are portrayed in the news, which explains the pervasive and unambiguous images of Evil Empires, terrorists, dictators, naked aggression, and other forms of perceived threat to one s safety and legitimate interests. There are many discursive means that strongly suggest such negative evaluations of them, including hyperbolic emphases on obvi- ously bad behavior and other rhetorical moves, such as metaphors or comparisons ( Saddam Hussein is Hitler ) that define us as victims and them as evil aggressors. Information that does not quite fit such an evaluative process and the construction of unambiguous attitudes, such as the death of many thousands of innocent Iraqi civilians as a con- sequence of the United States (not so smart) bombs, will be duly deem- phasized, if not fully concealed. 14 In sum, controlling attitudes may be a result of controlling the discourses of mass communication, as well as their topics, meanings, style, and rhetoric, whether by the journalists themselves or, indirectly, by those they accept as credible sources. Obviously, such results depend on the access to alternative sources of information, oppositional knowl- edge and beliefs, and more fundamental ideologies. Such ideologies are here defined as the basic mechanism of the social cognitions of a group, that is, as systems of norms and values that control the coherence and the development of more specific social attitudes. 15 Anti-Arab ideologies, for instance, will almost certainly be more supportive of the development of attitudes about the Gulf War, which in turn may justify such a war against an Arab aggressor. It will be shown how ideologies of race, class, gender, or world region control the production and understanding of news about minorities, women, workers, or the Third World. Once such fundamental patterns of knowledge, attitudes, and ideologies are firmly in place due to repeated news reporting and other forms of public discourse (e.g., in education), they will further act on their own when people have to evaluate news events. After some time, there is little need for conspicuous manipulation of specific knowledge and opinions of the readers for each case. Once given the (carefully selected) facts, although presented in a seemingly objective fashion, the readers will themselves produce the preferred models of the elites and may even act accordingly: An active consensus will replace passive or tacit consent. Ideological control in that case is virtually total, or hegemonic, precisely because persuasive text and talk are no longer seen as ideological but as self-evidently true, as is the case for much dominant discourse in the United States. On the other hand, in the for- mer Communist countries of Eastern Europe, official discourse was seen as so obviously ideological that its persuasive power was very limited. |
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