Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions

Media are no longer just a witness to sports events, facilitating our access to them, but have become the most powerful judging platform for sports competitions, serving as a guide for their interpretation and evaluation. The present study focuses on media framing of sports actors’ responsibility wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Diana Luiza Dumitriu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National University of Political Studies and Public Administration (SNSPA), College of Communication and Public Relations, Bucharest 2016-05-01
Series:Romanian Journal of Communications and Public Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journalofcommunication.ro/index.php/journalofcommunication/article/view/195
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spelling doaj-201d63c4783940219b3397f48d990d532020-11-24T21:36:56ZengNational University of Political Studies and Public Administration (SNSPA), College of Communication and Public Relations, BucharestRomanian Journal of Communications and Public Relations1454-81002344-54402016-05-01153658110.21018/rjcpr.2013.3.195195Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitionsDiana Luiza Dumitriu0National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, BucharestMedia are no longer just a witness to sports events, facilitating our access to them, but have become the most powerful judging platform for sports competitions, serving as a guide for their interpretation and evaluation. The present study focuses on media framing of sports actors’ responsibility when it comes to major sports competitions. Who is responsible for the team’s performance and results? In analysing media discourse, framing effects of sports events coverage will be examined from two inter-correlated dimensions, textually and visually. Based on an event-related corpus of on-line press articles from four national newspapers, this case study covers two major sports events: 2010 European Women’s Handball Championship and 2011 World Women’s Handball Championship. The discursive analysis of the press articles shows that, if winning competitive settings favour the emergence of a personification effect, building up sports heroes on both textual and visual dimensions, the responsibility of failure is rather diffused towards a collective referent. However, the visual component of press articles, along with the indirect strategy of addressing the responsibility issue throughout reported speech techniques, works as an alternative to the personification effect.http://journalofcommunication.ro/index.php/journalofcommunication/article/view/195responsibilityvisual framingcompetitive situationpersonification effectmedia discourse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diana Luiza Dumitriu
spellingShingle Diana Luiza Dumitriu
Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
Romanian Journal of Communications and Public Relations
responsibility
visual framing
competitive situation
personification effect
media discourse
author_facet Diana Luiza Dumitriu
author_sort Diana Luiza Dumitriu
title Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
title_short Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
title_full Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
title_fullStr Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
title_full_unstemmed Who is responsible for the team’s results? Media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
title_sort who is responsible for the team’s results? media framing of sports actors’ responsibility in major sports competitions
publisher National University of Political Studies and Public Administration (SNSPA), College of Communication and Public Relations, Bucharest
series Romanian Journal of Communications and Public Relations
issn 1454-8100
2344-5440
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Media are no longer just a witness to sports events, facilitating our access to them, but have become the most powerful judging platform for sports competitions, serving as a guide for their interpretation and evaluation. The present study focuses on media framing of sports actors’ responsibility when it comes to major sports competitions. Who is responsible for the team’s performance and results? In analysing media discourse, framing effects of sports events coverage will be examined from two inter-correlated dimensions, textually and visually. Based on an event-related corpus of on-line press articles from four national newspapers, this case study covers two major sports events: 2010 European Women’s Handball Championship and 2011 World Women’s Handball Championship. The discursive analysis of the press articles shows that, if winning competitive settings favour the emergence of a personification effect, building up sports heroes on both textual and visual dimensions, the responsibility of failure is rather diffused towards a collective referent. However, the visual component of press articles, along with the indirect strategy of addressing the responsibility issue throughout reported speech techniques, works as an alternative to the personification effect.
topic responsibility
visual framing
competitive situation
personification effect
media discourse
url http://journalofcommunication.ro/index.php/journalofcommunication/article/view/195
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