Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers

The study examined the framing of LGBTQ in four newspapers in Malaysia. The search uncovered 60 articles on LGBTQ published from January 1 to December 31, 2019 in four online newspapers, namely, MalaysiaKini, The Star Online, Free Malaysia Today, and Astro Awani Online. MalaysiaKini attributed the g...

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發表在:Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
主要作者: Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
格式: Article
語言:English
出版: Asia-Pacific Social Science Review 2023
在線閱讀:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165278072&partnerID=40&md5=2520bfed33221b8bb18d48868d5d3cb6
id 2-s2.0-85165278072
spelling 2-s2.0-85165278072
Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
2023
Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
23
2

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165278072&partnerID=40&md5=2520bfed33221b8bb18d48868d5d3cb6
The study examined the framing of LGBTQ in four newspapers in Malaysia. The search uncovered 60 articles on LGBTQ published from January 1 to December 31, 2019 in four online newspapers, namely, MalaysiaKini, The Star Online, Free Malaysia Today, and Astro Awani Online. MalaysiaKini attributed the greatest salience to LGBTQ both in article number and length. LGBTQ was mostly covered using episodic framing (72.73%–91.67%). There were significant differences among the four newspapers on the dominant frames used for representing LGBTQ. The most-used frame was morality in the articles published by the alternative newspapers, but the constitution and jurisprudence frame dominated in the mainstream newspaper, The Star. The four newspapers were similar in their reliance on human rights groups and politicians as information sources. The voices of LGBTQ are muted, implying that they have been sidelined as members of society who cannot assert their rights to speak. Some articles were written in a positive tone in The Star, Free Malaysia Today, and MalaysiaKini, but there were no articles with positive valence in Astro Awani. Negative valence dominated in LGBTQ coverage, reflecting the disapproval of LGBTQ in Malaysia where Islam is the official religion and homosexuality is banned. The findings suggest that dominant frames and valence are constructed through a selective choice of information sources in the context of cultural factors that are at play. © 2023, by De La Salle University.
Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
1198386
English
Article

author Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
spellingShingle Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
author_facet Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
author_sort Ting S.-H.; Jerome C.; Yeo J.-Y.
title Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
title_short Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
title_full Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
title_fullStr Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
title_full_unstemmed Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
title_sort Deviants or “Normal” Citizens?: Framing of LGBTQ in Malaysian Newspapers
publishDate 2023
container_title Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
container_volume 23
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165278072&partnerID=40&md5=2520bfed33221b8bb18d48868d5d3cb6
description The study examined the framing of LGBTQ in four newspapers in Malaysia. The search uncovered 60 articles on LGBTQ published from January 1 to December 31, 2019 in four online newspapers, namely, MalaysiaKini, The Star Online, Free Malaysia Today, and Astro Awani Online. MalaysiaKini attributed the greatest salience to LGBTQ both in article number and length. LGBTQ was mostly covered using episodic framing (72.73%–91.67%). There were significant differences among the four newspapers on the dominant frames used for representing LGBTQ. The most-used frame was morality in the articles published by the alternative newspapers, but the constitution and jurisprudence frame dominated in the mainstream newspaper, The Star. The four newspapers were similar in their reliance on human rights groups and politicians as information sources. The voices of LGBTQ are muted, implying that they have been sidelined as members of society who cannot assert their rights to speak. Some articles were written in a positive tone in The Star, Free Malaysia Today, and MalaysiaKini, but there were no articles with positive valence in Astro Awani. Negative valence dominated in LGBTQ coverage, reflecting the disapproval of LGBTQ in Malaysia where Islam is the official religion and homosexuality is banned. The findings suggest that dominant frames and valence are constructed through a selective choice of information sources in the context of cultural factors that are at play. © 2023, by De La Salle University.
publisher Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
issn 1198386
language English
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