Professionalism and Fetishistic Disavowal in Thai and Chinese Journalism

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Abstract

This study reviews how Thai and Chinese journalists talk about power and truth in relationship to their Fourth Estate role through examining twenty qualitative interviews. Adding to a previous study similarly looking at US and UK journalists it finds that, like their western counterparts, truth is heavily fetishized, being an ideal that journalists admittedly can never reach. However power relations are discussed quite differently, showing how the divergent power structures of the four countries create very different discourses of the power of journalists which are not fetishized to the same extent. This article thus finds that there are limitations to the universality of Žižek’s concept of ideology as fetishistic disavowal (that is, being able to actively admit the limitations of one’s profession as long as one still performs it) in the realm of comparative journalism.

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APA

Hearns-Branaman, J. O. (2023). Professionalism and Fetishistic Disavowal in Thai and Chinese Journalism. Journalism, 24(2), 436–452. https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849211017743

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