Perpetration, victimhood, and blame : Australian newspaper representations of domestic violence, 2000–2020 Effie Karageorgos, Amy Boyle, Patricia Pender and Julia Cook
By: Karageorgos, Effie.
Contributor(s): Boyle, Amy | Pender, Patricia | Cook, Julia.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Violence Against Women.Publisher: Sage, 2024Subject(s): ATTITUDES | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MEDIA | PERPETRATORS | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIAOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/10778012231166401 (Open access) In: Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(9): 2148-2173Summary: Newspaper media plays a significant role in forming a public understanding of domestic violence. This article analyses 554 articles from 24 newspapers across Australian states and territories published between 2000 and 2020 that describe specific instances of domestic violence. It examines whether such violence is framed as a systemic issue or as a collection of individual events, as well as how such representations of perpetrators and victims displace both “blame” and “victimhood.” Although positive aspects of reporting can be observed, the tendency within newspaper articles to blur distinctions between perpetrators and victims distorts the true scale of domestic violence in Australia. (Authors' abstract). Record #8739Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON24060004 |
Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(9): 2148-2173
Newspaper media plays a significant role in forming a public understanding of domestic violence. This article analyses 554 articles from 24 newspapers across Australian states and territories published between 2000 and 2020 that describe specific instances of domestic violence. It examines whether such violence is framed as a systemic issue or as a collection of individual events, as well as how such representations of perpetrators and victims displace both “blame” and “victimhood.” Although positive aspects of reporting can be observed, the tendency within newspaper articles to blur distinctions between perpetrators and victims distorts the true scale of domestic violence in Australia. (Authors' abstract). Record #8739