Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII

Canada’s public immigration discourse is usually racialized in using an ideological framework to evaluate, select and make judgements of immigrants on whether they are culturally, socially, or economically desirable to Canada. Some social and economic affairs may present a discursive context for deb...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Li, Peter S.
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2013-12-1313
id ndltd-USASK-oai-ecommons.usask.ca-10388-ETD-2013-12-1313
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-USASK-oai-ecommons.usask.ca-10388-ETD-2013-12-13132014-01-11T04:56:57ZMedia Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWIIracialized discourseimmigrationdemocratic racismdiscourse analysisCanada’s public immigration discourse is usually racialized in using an ideological framework to evaluate, select and make judgements of immigrants on whether they are culturally, socially, or economically desirable to Canada. Some social and economic affairs may present a discursive context for debates over immigration and the value of immigrants to Canada. By using a critical discourse analysis of news articles on immigration in Canada’s national newspaper The Globe and Mail in four historical phases after the end of the Second World War, this study examines how the contents of “desirable immigrants” were changed throughout history. This study questions whether some social political affairs in a country or an extreme economic situation such as high unemployment can change the social boundaries of exclusion for immigrants of certain racial and ethnic backgrounds and allow more direct and exclusionary racial messages to be expressed in the discourse. The findings indicate that during economic recessions, it is more acceptable for the media and the public to express more directly racist messages about non-white immigrants, and some political factors and major social events may also influence how different ethnic groups of immigrants can be socially constructed. While a liberal democratic country like Canada may not accept overt racial discrimination, I argue that a social crisis or economic recession can change the social boundaries of exclusion for immigrants of certain racial and ethnic backgrounds and justify using more blatant racial messages in discussing immigrants.Li, Peter S.2014-01-10T12:00:11Z2014-01-10T12:00:11Z2013-122014-01-09December 2013textthesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2013-12-1313eng
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic racialized discourse
immigration
democratic racism
discourse analysis
spellingShingle racialized discourse
immigration
democratic racism
discourse analysis
Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
description Canada’s public immigration discourse is usually racialized in using an ideological framework to evaluate, select and make judgements of immigrants on whether they are culturally, socially, or economically desirable to Canada. Some social and economic affairs may present a discursive context for debates over immigration and the value of immigrants to Canada. By using a critical discourse analysis of news articles on immigration in Canada’s national newspaper The Globe and Mail in four historical phases after the end of the Second World War, this study examines how the contents of “desirable immigrants” were changed throughout history. This study questions whether some social political affairs in a country or an extreme economic situation such as high unemployment can change the social boundaries of exclusion for immigrants of certain racial and ethnic backgrounds and allow more direct and exclusionary racial messages to be expressed in the discourse. The findings indicate that during economic recessions, it is more acceptable for the media and the public to express more directly racist messages about non-white immigrants, and some political factors and major social events may also influence how different ethnic groups of immigrants can be socially constructed. While a liberal democratic country like Canada may not accept overt racial discrimination, I argue that a social crisis or economic recession can change the social boundaries of exclusion for immigrants of certain racial and ethnic backgrounds and justify using more blatant racial messages in discussing immigrants.
author2 Li, Peter S.
author_facet Li, Peter S.
title Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
title_short Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
title_full Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
title_fullStr Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
title_full_unstemmed Media Representation of Immigrants in Canada Since WWII
title_sort media representation of immigrants in canada since wwii
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2013-12-1313
_version_ 1716623732856848384