Minimalist Storytelling: The Natural Framing of Electoral Violence by Mexican Media
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Authors
Schedler, AndreasPublisher
SAGE PublicationsType
Journal articleTitle / Series / Name
Journal of Politics in Latin AmericaPublication Volume
14Publication Issue
3Date
2022
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During the first two decades of the twenty-first century, Mexico’s so-called drug war claimed around a quarter of a million lives. Adapting to this enduring epidemic of violence, the print media have adopted a minimalist reporting style that gives only thin, formulaic accounts of violent events. As I argue, established journalistic minimalism does more than provide little information about violence. With practised impassiveness, it frames violence in a way that creates a certain narrative: not of social actors to be understood but of natural events to be endured. Through a qualitative content analysis of over 1200 news reports, I examine the persistent force of this “natural” frame in the face of an extraordinary development: the unprecedented intrusion of political violence into the 2018 general elections, when forty-eight candidates were assassinated.identifiers
10.1177/1866802x221124032ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1177/1866802x221124032
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