‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space
Research has shown news media in post-colonial societies such as Aotearoa New Zealand naturalise the colonising processes by which settler values and social organisation were imposed and the resulting marginalised status of the indigenous peoples. We explore these processes in news reports that cla...
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doaj-40d99dd69b66401f90d5ae4fb45071d82020-11-25T03:12:33ZengPacific Media CentrePacific Journalism Review1023-94992324-20352009-05-0115110.24135/pjr.v15i1.968‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air spaceRaymond NairnTim McCreanorJenny RankineAngela Moewaka BarnesFrank PegaAmanda Gregory Research has shown news media in post-colonial societies such as Aotearoa New Zealand naturalise the colonising processes by which settler values and social organisation were imposed and the resulting marginalised status of the indigenous peoples. We explore these processes in news reports that claimed Māori wanted to charge for airspace over Lake Taupo. Studying headlines, the originating newspaper article, and subsequent television reports, we show how Māori were constructed as threatening the ability of ‘New Zealanders’ to enjoy the lake. That threat was constructed as imminent although the accounts included no direct evidence or identified source for the reported demand. We consider the one-sided coverage inaccurate, unbalanced and unfair, encouraging perceptions of Māori as hostile and disruptive social actors in our contemporary society. Wider implications of this media performance for this crucial area of social relations are considered. https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/968media representationMaoriPakehacolonialism |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Raymond Nairn Tim McCreanor Jenny Rankine Angela Moewaka Barnes Frank Pega Amanda Gregory |
spellingShingle |
Raymond Nairn Tim McCreanor Jenny Rankine Angela Moewaka Barnes Frank Pega Amanda Gregory ‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space Pacific Journalism Review media representation Maori Pakeha colonialism |
author_facet |
Raymond Nairn Tim McCreanor Jenny Rankine Angela Moewaka Barnes Frank Pega Amanda Gregory |
author_sort |
Raymond Nairn |
title |
‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space |
title_short |
‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space |
title_full |
‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space |
title_fullStr |
‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space |
title_full_unstemmed |
‘Media surveillance of the natives’: A New Zealand case study―Lake Taupo air space |
title_sort |
‘media surveillance of the natives’: a new zealand case study―lake taupo air space |
publisher |
Pacific Media Centre |
series |
Pacific Journalism Review |
issn |
1023-9499 2324-2035 |
publishDate |
2009-05-01 |
description |
Research has shown news media in post-colonial societies such as Aotearoa New Zealand naturalise the colonising processes by which settler values and social organisation were imposed and the resulting marginalised status of the indigenous peoples. We explore these processes in news reports that claimed Māori wanted to charge for airspace over Lake Taupo. Studying headlines, the originating newspaper article, and subsequent television reports, we show how Māori were constructed as threatening the ability of ‘New Zealanders’ to enjoy the lake. That threat was constructed as imminent although the accounts included no direct evidence or identified source for the reported demand. We consider the one-sided coverage inaccurate, unbalanced and unfair, encouraging perceptions of Māori as hostile and disruptive social actors in our contemporary society. Wider implications of this media performance for this crucial area of social relations are considered.
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topic |
media representation Maori Pakeha colonialism |
url |
https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/968 |
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