Publication: The pandemic shock doctrine in an authoritarian context: the economic, bodily, and political precarity of Turkey’s journalists during the pandemic
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Ertuna, Can
Advisor
Publication Date
2022
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
What happens to journalists when hit by a pandemic in a country governed by authoritarian media regulations? We examine journalists' experience in Turkey's mainstream and alternative media and find that while the pandemic has deepened their economic precarity, journalists further suffer from bodily and political precarity. In the context of Covid, the body emerges as a site on which precarity with multiple dimensions (economic anxiety, illness, and state violence) is inscribed. Under the conditions of what we deem political precarity, most journalists cannot speak truth to power as the pandemic is politically instrumentalized. This retheorizing of precarity dewesternizes the term by connecting it to state-induced forms of violence relying on relations of political recognition and value ascription. We urge journalism and media labor studies to refrain from Eurocentricism and technological determinism that center the standard employment model and the disruptive cultures of technology at the expense of body and politics.
Description
Source:
Media Culture & Society
Publisher:
Sage Publications Ltd
Keywords:
Subject
Communication, Sociology