doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200010191
Article type: Original Research
1 January 2001
Volume 26 Issue 2
doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200010191
Article type: Original Research
1 January 2001
Volume 26 Issue 2
Journalists as agents and language as an instrument of social control: A child protection case study
Chris Goddard1,2
Bernadette Saunders1,3
Affiliations
1 Child Abuse & Family Violence Research Unit
2 Department of Social Work Monash University Wellington Road, Clayton, Vic 3168, Chris.Goddard@arts.monash.edu.au
3 Department of Social Work Monash University, Victoria, 3168.
Contributions
Chris Goddard -
Bernadette Saunders -
Chris Goddard1,2
Bernadette Saunders1,3
Affiliations
1 Child Abuse & Family Violence Research Unit
2 Department of Social Work Monash University Wellington Road, Clayton, Vic 3168, Chris.Goddard@arts.monash.edu.au
3 Department of Social Work Monash University, Victoria, 3168.
CITATION: Goddard C., & Saunders B. (2001). Journalists as agents and language as an instrument of social control: A child protection case study. Children Australia, 26(2), 1336. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200010191
Abstract
In recent years there has been considerable analysis of how the media create images of crime. The relationship between child abuse and the media has also been subject to greater scrutiny. This article examines the role of one newspaper in a child protection case. The part played by the newspaper in the court case led to an examination of the language used by the media in their representations of children. The researchers found that a child may be objectified in language even when the child’s gender is previously identified. The ‘gender slippage’ may in extreme cases lead to the ‘textual abuse’ of children, where child abuse is rewritten to lessen the impact on the reader. The authors conclude that the actions of journalists and the language they use require more critical analysis.