Critical Discourse Analysis: Mass Media Deti Anitasari Department of English Education, Faculty of Teacher Training and Education, Universitas Lancang Kuning detianitas@gmail.com ABSTRACT: In this paper, the researcher aims are to review some key problems of approaches to research on mass media text from point of view discourse analytical and to present an argument, as well as a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) structures for analysis of mass media discourse. The researcher regards a number of areas of critical research interest in mass media discourse locally and elsewhere. An instance of actual CDA researches on mass media discourse is reviewed in terms of topics of obviously popular interest among society, before listing methodological, as well as the topical plan by a main support in the field for further work. This paper concludes that CDA’s multidisciplinary approach helps to understand and aware of the hidden socio-political issues and agenda in all kinds of areas of language as a social practice to empower the individual and social groups. Keywords: Critical Discourse Analysis, Critical Discourse studies, Mass Media Discourse, Media text Analysis INTRODUCTION Discourse has been explained as structures and practices that reflect human thought and social realities through particular collections of words and that simultaneously construct meaning in the world (Fairclough, 2003). Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) proposes a research methodology for deconstructing discourses and fixed power relationship. From epistemological standpoint, it presupposes the multiple possibilities of knowing and interpreting the world (Yanow, 2000. Through mass media we could know about the world as well, mass communication is a tools communication between human, how human talks to one another via verbal and non-verbal means, but which concerns messages that are essentially transmitted through a medium (channel) to reach a large number of people (Wimmer & Dominick, 2012, Devito, 2011). From the beginning, for a clear point of view on the problems relating to mass media effects, it is helpful to clarify what constitutes mass media in current communication studies, i.e. “any communication channel used to simultaneously reach a large number of people, including radio, TV, newspapers, magazines, billboards, films, recordings, books, and the Internet as well as the new category smart mass media, which include Smartphone, smart TVs, and tablets” (Wimmer & Dominick, 2012). In this journal, the researcher aims to review some key problems in approaches to research on mass media texts from point of view discourse analytical and to present an argument, as well as a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) structure for analysis of mass media discourse. The researcher regard a number of areas of critical research interest in mass media discourse locally and elsewhere. Regardless of mass communication progress and associated smart media technologies and related media product over the years, it seems that mass media research began to merge with discourse. Therefore, van Dijk has also used a mixture of content analysis and discourse analytical categories or structures and also deal with social issues in mass media discourse and their correlated socio-cultural and cognitive aspect. Therefore, refocused their interest on the “(social, cultural, and political) context and the ‘localization’ of meaning” (Wodak & Busch, 2004) and also their well-known that more than 40% of the papers published in the leading journal Discourse & Society are based on media texts. Furthermore, it had been argued before that approaching mass media studies from a paradigm-based vantage was filled with speculations, more than 60% in the social science paradigm compared with about 34% in the interpretive paradigm and less than 6% in the critical one) So, Potter et al. (1993) concluded that even if the social science paradigm can come out as the majority paradigm in normal communication research journals, it “could not be considered a dominant paradigm in the research field” in question. Possibly, as van Dijk (1996) has noted, instead of focusing on the effects of mass media from a communication studies point of view, discourse-oriented research could consider “properties of the social power of the media, not restricted to the influence of the media on their audiences, but which also involves the role of the media within the broader framework of the social, cultural, political, or economic power structures of society”. In another place in the literature, proponents of mass media analysis, though with a clear focus on political theory such as Carpentier and de Cleen (2007), progress bringing discourse theory into media studies. They concern Laclau and Mouffe’s theories of discourse, also hegemony and socialist strategy (Laclau & Mouffe, 1987, 2001) to fluent Discourse-Theoretical Analysis (DTA), at that time they compare to CDA but only to give in that “a significant number of valuable contributions of DTA to media studies can be found within CDA the standard framework for analyzing media texts” (Carpentier & De Cleen, 2007). RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Critical Media Analysis: An Overview Discourse is language as a subject and relates to expressing ourselves through words in ways of knowing the world. As theory and research in functional linguistics have shown, linguistic forms can be systematically associated with social and ideological functions (Halliday & Matthiessen, 1994). Perhaps, more importantly, discourses can also be used to resist and critique such assertions of power. CDA is the multidisciplinary field of inquiry traditional approaches such as conversation analysis, ethnography of communication and interactional sociolinguistics. The term “discourse” is a complex and like mammoth’s interpretation. Many earlier studies mention the term discourse as very ambiguous since its introduction to modern discipline and many broad interpretations of discourse, it refers to the speech patterns and how language, dialects, and acceptable statements are used in a particular community. Discourse as a subject of study looks at discourse among people who share the same speech conventions. Moreover, discourse refers to the linguistics of language use as a way of understanding interactions in a social context, specifically the analysis of occurring connected speech or written discourse, Dakowska (2001) in Hamuddin (2012). Even though discourse also has resources besides language that is instantiated together as in mass media texts such as multimedia texts, streaming video, and related multimodal discursive practices on the Internet (Kress & van Leeuwen, 2001), language is the most complex in the process of situated meaning-making (“semiosis”) in the social context of discourse production and interpretation (Fairclough, 1989, 1995; Halliday & Matthiessen, 1994). Basically, discourse is language in context and relate to valuing, expressing ourselves through words in ways of knowing. As research and theory in general functional linguistics have shown, linguistic forms can be systematically associated with social and ideological functions (Halliday & Matthiessen, 1994). Van Dijk (1997) choose the term CDS (Critical Discourse Studies), “a new cross-discipline that comprises the theory and analysis of text and talk in virtually all disciplines of the humanities and social science” CDA describes, interprets, analyses, and critiques social life (Luke, 1997) by studying “the discursive practices of a community its normal ways of using language”. Structure of discourse is distinguished by three levels of meaning namely Text, Interaction and Context. Text: The first aspect ‘discourse as text’ purposes to learning the textual features of discourses, that is ‘how is the text designed, why it is designed in this way, and how else could it have been designed?’ (Fairclough,1995, p. 207). In this level, the focus exploration more on the formal features of the text such as vocabulary, grammar syntax or specific lexis, phrase, sentence, figures, images, chart or a combination all of these (multimedia). Interaction: Richard Buchanan shares Davis’s broad analysis of interaction. Interaction is a mode of framing the relationship between people and objects considered for them and thus a way of framing the action of design. Which is concerns the process of text production and text interpretation. Context: H.G. Widdowson, while learning on language meaning, thought “context” as “those aspects of the circumstance of actual language use which are taken as relevant to meaning.” He added pointed out, “in other words, context is a schematic construct...the achievement of pragmatic meaning is a matter of matching up the linguistic elements of the code with the schematic elements of the context.” (H.G. Widdowson, 2000, p.126). In discourse, this deals with the broader social and cultural conditions of discourse production and interpretation. Linguistic analysis of a text cover up the traditional outline of linguistic analysis such as semantics, vocabulary, grammar, writing system analyses and phonology but includes textual organization above the sentence such as turn taking, generic structure and cohesion. Mediating between the text and social practice, the interpretation stage of analysis involves the process of text comprehension and is concerned with the cognitive processes of members. To conclude, the stage of explanation covers the analysis of the relationship between interaction and the social context of production and interpretation (Fairclough, 2001). It is related to dissimilar levels of abstraction of an event: the immediate, situational context, and institutional practices the event is embedded in (Fairclough, 1995, 2001). From the centrality of discursive strategies in Wodak’s DHA, there are four macro strategies of discourse for the analysis of national identities that is destructive strategies, transformational strategies, constructive strategies and perpetuating strategies. Added, in analyzing text to national identity or nationhood, discursive approach may be based on four key questions: 1) From what perspective or points of view are these naming, attributions and arguments expressed? (perspective strategies) 2) What qualities, characteristics and features are attributed to them? (predicational strategies) 3) How are persons named and referred to linguistically? (referential strategies) 4) By means of what arguments do specific persons or social groups try to justify and legitimate the discrimination and exploitation of others? (argumentation strategies) By attention to the illustration of groups and the social relations between them, van Dijk’s approach is helpful for analysis of news discourses to study the socio-ideological illustration of “Us vs. They”. Van Dijk (2001) begins his analytical approach with topics or “semantic macrostructures”, which he argues, provide an initial overall idea of what a discourse or corpus of texts is all about, and controls many other aspects of discourse and its analysis (p.102) after that, he analyses local or “microstructures” for the meaning of words (lexical), the structures of propositions, and coherence and other relations between propositions (p.103). Then, at the “meso” level like mediating between global and local meanings, he classifies an overall strategy of ‘positive self-presentation and negative other presentation’, in which our good things and their bad things are emphasized, and our bad things and their good things are de-emphasized (p.103). As can be seen, the general values of CDA, which are agreed between the socio cognitive and the socio critical approaches, as follow: 1) Discourse constitutes society and culture in a dialectical relationship 2) CDA addresses social problems 3) The link between text and society is mediated through discourse 4) Discourse is a form of social action From above values reflect the varied ways in which discourse works and when appropriated by the powerholders in society, principally the state and/or those who control the mass media, it serves to pass unequal power relations and representations of social groups, appearing to be ordinary sense, usual, and normal when in fact there is intrinsic prejudice, injustice and social discrimination. Bridging CDA And The Media In current years, with the discuss on globalization as “the principal frame of reference when we try to explain economic, new political and cultural phenomena and the spread of the Internet, media and communication are ascribed a significant part in the processes of change” (Hjarvard, 2003). Even a brief expression on how the array of mass media channels listed at the beginning of this paper impacts people’s lives will bear testimony to our massmediated world and the emergence of the network society (Castells, 2000, 2011). Wodak and Busch (2004) have noted, in CDA, media are images of public space and may be studied as sites of social power and struggle, mainly in terms of the language of the mass media: “Language is often only apparently transparent. Media institutions often purport to be neutral, in that they provide space for public discourse, reflect states of affairs disinterestedly, and give the perceptions and arguments of the newsmakers” (p.110), while they often have hidden sociopolitical agenda that lie at the heart of the matter (e.g. Gamson, Croteau, Hoynes, & Sasson, 1992; Herman & Chomsky, 2008; Miller, 2004). Main problems that are appropriated in the outline include capitalism, racism, nationalism, identity politics, antisemitism and war reporting. Some areas of CDA research in relation to the mass media and related examples are outlined below. News of War Critical discourse analysis (CDA) brings the critical tradition in social analysis into language studies, and contributes to critical social analysis a particular focus on discourse, and relations between discourse and other social elements. In the mass media has war reporting to analyzed using the CDA approach. Davies (2007) analyzed a Sunday Mirror news report of the February 2003 demonstration in London against the Iraq war as branch of a larger study of the textual generation of oppositional pairs in news reports in the UK national press. He find out much quoted response by George Bush to the attack on the World Trade Centre in 2001, “Either you are with us or with the terrorist’ combine rhetorically to construct groups of protesters as acceptable and unacceptable’ ” (pp.7173). Davies disagree that even though Bush had used “either”, he employed “us and terrorist” unusually rather than “us and them” in seeking to unite America and the rest of the world “against a common enemy” leaving no possibility of a middle way” (Davies,2007) In another hand, patterns of press discourse in the after effects of the Persian Gulf War (1990- 1991) appeared to give broad insights into “America’s `master narrative’ of war, a narrative which had been threatened by the Vietnam experience” (Hackett & Zhao, 1994). To show how the state apply the mainstream media to promote its own interests, Kellner (1992) look into “a classic case of media manipulation” that showed that the Bush administration had secretly released disinformation to the press “to legitimate sending U.S. troops and to mobilize public support for this action”. In the consequent period of the war, the media became a tool for U.S. policy, “privileging those voices seeking a military solution to the conflict” (p.57). Generally, other than working with online news reports that might be found on their editorial pages (see for e.g., Sani, Abdullah, Ali, & Abdullah, 2012a; Sani, Abdullah, Ali, & Abdullah, 2012b), CDA work has dealt with social media and networking sites such as Facebook (Eisenlauer, 2013), radio and television, as well as their associated genres. Look, for example, Chouliaraki’s (2004) analysis of footage on television of the September 11th attacks in New York. Further, while the general focus of critical analysis is based on the study of linguistic features of media texts, and images are treated as “visual language” (Fairclough, 2001), i.e. often analyzed as if they were linguistic text (Jørgensen & Phillips, 2002, p.61), Kress and van Leeuwen’s (Kress & van Leeuwen, 2001, 2006) work in critical social semiotics has served to elucidate visual features via multimodal discourse analysis (see also Lemke, 2004; Machin & Mayr, 2012). News of Capitalism An additional area of research on mass media discourse is as well as major in CDA and “which illustrates the mediating and constructing role of the media” (Wodak & Meyer, 2009) in neocapitalist, neoliberal discourses have been found by Fairclough. In this reasonably new area of critical work, the “language of the new capitalism” (Wodak & Busch, 2004) submitted to both the dominant global position of the English language also to the language as discourse of the globalization project (Fairclough, 2001a). In both senses, neocapitalist language is linked to discourses of modernization, democratization, transparency etc., in a sequence of similarity to the digitallynetworked k-economy characterized by “time-space distanciation” as “an extension in the spate-temporal reach of power” in language use (Chouliaraki & Fairclough, 1999). Advertisement Language Advertisements are generally connected with the mass media of magazine, newspaper, television, etc., the public also encounters them on billboards, posters and in direct mail (Rotzoll, 1985), not to talk about in recent times on the ubiquitous Internet web page. Bhatia (2004) statements that advertisements as the “primary and most dominant form of promotional discourse” (p.89) are readily appropriated via the mixing of genres. For example, the South China Morning Post carries a special weekly creation or service evaluate called “Classified Plus”, which in the mixed kind form such as “an advertorial or a blurb has been deceptively used as a recommendation or a review, whereas in fact it is no different from an advertisement” (p.91). In the case of advertisements that utilize multiple semiotic modalities including linguistics text to make a composite image of a preferred representation, Machin and Mayr (2012) promoter a social semiotics approach based on the pioneering work of Kress and van Leeuwen (2001). Even as Machin and Mayr (2012) reminder that “how much images can be described as working like language the multimodal discourse analysts’ claim has been challenged”, they show how Kress and van Leeuwen’s analytical toolkit utilized together with CDA “does enhance our ability to describe more systematically what it is that we see” (p.8), taking the typical text plus image “Easy-at-work fitness tips!” advertisement in Cosmopolitan magazine targeting young female office workers who need “fitness tips for bikini body performance” (Machin & Mayr, 2012). The study shows that the image does not depict “a real woman at work”, however rather “one that symbolizes a particular kind of lifestyle” to sell advertising space, and the magazine, while distracting “the reader from the absurdity of many of the tips provided” (pp.9-10). Language on Racism Racist is a stigmatizing headword and political fighting word that seem to be on almost everyone’s lips today, there is talk of a genetic, cultural, biological, institutional and ethno pluralist. The starting point of a discourse analytical approach to the phenomenon of racism is to realize that racism, as both social practice and ideology, obvious itself discursive. Van dijk reminders that empirical research in many countries have shown that “the media play an important role in expressing and spreading ethnic prejudice which is one of the conditions of racist practices that define racism as the social system of ethnic power abuse”. Definitely, Wodak and Busch (2004) have underlined, the (written) news kind has been most important in CDA research on media including journal editing and right-wing editorial prejudice in newspapers and Wodak’s own studies of nationalism, antiSemitism and neo-racism (Wodak, De Cillia, Reisigl, & Liebhart, 2009). Studies on the local scene that have delved into racism, nationalist ideologies and related practices in news media include those by Abdullah (2004). Outline of Current or Future Research Areas There are some list areas of interest in CDA that constitue current critical research according Wodak and Meyer (2009) that perhaps linked to the challenges and to socio political issues in the media such as racism, globalization and gender. Some of the areas essentially cover up methodological issues even as impinging to a lesser point on topical interest, as follows: 1) Effects of new media and changed concepts of space and time 2) New phenomena in our political systems arising from local as well global developments 3) Relationship between complex historical processes ,hegemonic narrative and CDA approaches especially in the context of identity politics 4) Effect of knowledge based economy (KBE) on society and its re-contextualization CONCLUSIONS The review here of real research conducted using the approach, of course incomplete but the researcher assume it REFERENCES Hamuddin, B. (2012). A comparative study of politeness strategies in economic journals (Doctoral dissertation, University of Malaya). Hamuddin, B., & Noor, F. N. M. (2015, August). A Closer Look on could be an early roadmap to further exploration of the language of the mass media, as it happened, and its role in hegemonic social practices and legitimating unequal power relations. In the previous sections of this article, I have tried to make a representation of CDA as a multidisciplinary approach to the critical analysis of mass media discourse with special reference to oft hidden socio-political issues such as capitalism, nationalism, identity politics, racism and war reporting. Enlightenment of social issues and problems in this way can only empower disenfranchised, oppressed individuals and marginalized. CDA “tries to illuminate ways in which the dominant forces in a society construct versions of reality that favor their interests”, also to reveal such practices “to support the victims of such oppression and encourage them to resist and transform their lives”, as McGregor (2003) remarks. 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