ID | 144684 |
Title Proper | Attitude of the local press to marginal groups |
Other Title Information | between solidarity and alienation |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ben-Asher, Smadar ; Ben-Atar, Ella |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines the 2001‒2003 coverage by the local press in the Haifa region of the struggle of the fishermen who claimed to have contracted cancer as a result of coming into contact with the polluted water of the Kishon River. It shows that the local press chose to deliver to its readers an ‘interpretive package’ that portrays the fishermen as ‘The River’s Heroes’, a group fighting for justice and morality for the benefit of all. However, alongside the favourable framing were also some of the writers’ stereotypical elitist perceptions, at times explicit and at others implicit, of the fishermen. In the case of the Kishon fishermen, whereas the local press played an important role in covering their struggle, it only partially presented the solidarity dimension wherein the differences between people and groups constitutes the basis for moral relations between them. |
`In' analytical Note | Israel Affairs Vol. 22, No.2; Apr 2016: p.528-548 |
Journal Source | Israel Affairs Vol: 22 No 2 |
Key Words | solidarity ; Framing ; Fishermen ; Local Press ; Interpretive Package ; Kishon Affair |