Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Victims or Heroes? — Disability Representations in a Hungarian Online News Media Portal

Title / Series / Name
Publication Volume
5
Publication Issue
2
Pages
Editors
Keywords
Disabled people
Online news media
Social representation
Critical discourse analysis
Hungary
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/27805
Abstract
While studies consistently show that the popular media often provide medicalized images of disabled people as “other” or inferior, dynamic societal changes, such as the diffusion of human rights laws, increasing public awareness, and the mediatization of disability activism, also influence media representations. The present research aims to identify relevant discursive practices in Hungarian online news media, a non-Western European country with about 50 years of a state party system under communism, and offer insight into how progressive policy changes and mediatized activism shape media features on disability. To establish the dataset, the most visited and independent online news media portal in Hungary (24.hu) was searched for articles discussing disability between 2019 and 2022. The 481 relevant articles extracted were analyzed using Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) with the help of MAXQDA 2020. The findings reveal a multiplicity of disability representations: medicalized and victimized images on the one hand, and reports of resilience and “heroism” on the other. Three distinct discursive practices are identified: (1) traditional/ableist representations, (2) alternative representations with ableist framing, and (3) agency and the co-creation of disability representations. Results suggest that even 30 years after the political changes, disabled people’s collective agency is marginal in Hungary, and that socio-legal changes and mediatized disability activism are yet to influence news media features.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Journal article
Date
2025-06
Language
ISBN
Identifiers
10.3390/disabilities5020058
Publisher link
Unit