'‘Flaites’, ‘Rotos’ and ‘Choros’: A Polyphonic Analysis of Op-Ed Pieces Dealing with Crime during the 2019 Chilean Social Outbreak
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Ediciones Universitarias de Valparaíso
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Publication date:
2023
Abstract:
The way crime is portrayed in the media always influences public opinion and citizens’
behaviour, but specifically in social uprisings, crime becomes ubiquitous and the way it
is presented by the media becomes even more important. Therefore, the need to
explore how it is reported in media arises, especially in opinion genres of widely read
newspapers. Po-ed pieces, subjected to journalistic and situation restrictions, aim to
interpret and explain events, which becomes a challenge in extraordinary contexts. This
is why we pose the question: how is the discourse about crime presented in the frame
of the 2019 Chilean Social Outbreak through the polyphony that is present in op-ed
pieces of widely read newspapers with a great impact on citizens? With the use of
polyphony, we aim to reveal implicit attitudes and capture an instance of the public
discourse about crime. The question is answered following a qualitative analysis of a
corpus of thirty-nine op-ed pieces about crime during the first month of the Chilean
uprising of 2019. In the results section, we present the polyphonic features that have an
impact on crime presentation, we detail the types of crime which are present in the
polyphony of the op-ed pieces, and we compare the attitudes towards crime in each
newspaper. We observe a tendency towards presenting crime in its physical form
between marginal groups and security forces, a ‘good versus bad guys’ fight, from
which the image of injured eyes stands out but death is minimised. Thus, the
predominant fear is the one towards marginal groups to which urban violence is
attributed
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