Talking With the 'Hermit Regime'| North Korean Media Penetration and Influence in Chinese and Russian Media: Strategic Narratives During the 2017‒2018 Nuclear Confrontation

Authors

  • Robert Hinck Monmouth College
  • Skye C. Cooley Oklahoma State University USA

Keywords:

North Korea, strategic narratives, nuclear weapons, global media

Abstract

Research on North Korea’s internationally oriented media remains sparse, with most studies conducting comparative framing analyses of its nuclear program with other nations’ national media. While these studies find national press agencies differentially framing the issue along their national interests, questions remain regarding whether such coverage influences others to shift their perspectives and, if so, why. To address these questions, we evaluate North Korean narrative penetration in Russian and Chinese news through the framework of strategic narratives. We conducted a quantitative and qualitative narrative analysis of 1,045 news articles from eight Russian and Chinese news sources for references made to North Korean sources from May 2017 to August 2018. The findings indicate that increasing voice was granted to North Korean narratives as North Korean actions aligned with Russian and Chinese interests; the results of this coverage included legitimizing the Kim regime, bolstering Russian and Chinese international influence, and reducing U.S. influence and support for denuclearization.

Author Biographies

Robert Hinck, Monmouth College

Robert Hinck (Ph.D., Texas A&M University) is an Assistant Professor of Organizational Communication at Monmouth College.

Skye C. Cooley, Oklahoma State University USA

Asst. Professor, Mass and Strategic CommunicationsOklahoma State UniversityUSA

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Published

2020-02-23

Issue

Section

Special Sections