Refugees and National Identity in Letters to the Editor

Authors

  • Kate Dunsmore Fairleigh Dickinson University
  • Andrea Hickerson University of South Carolina

Keywords:

refugee, immigration, framing, discourse, letters to the editor, Canada, Australia, United States

Abstract

Construction of refugees in news has been extensively researched. Less researched is the link between refugees and the construction of the receiving country’s national identity. This discourse analysis of letters to the editor in Australia, Canada, and the United States found wide variance in the way refugees and refugee policy were linked to the construction of national identity. Letters were selected if they referred to refugees and fell within a few news cycles of the respective national holidays. These tight criteria yielded a sample manifesting multiple discourses including the nation as protector, the nation as normative leader, the nation among nations, and the nation as a site of individual identity construction.

Author Biographies

Kate Dunsmore, Fairleigh Dickinson University

Associate Professor, Director of MA in Communication, Department of Communication Studies

Andrea Hickerson, University of South Carolina

Director, School of Journalism and Mass Communications University of South Carolina

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Published

2020-06-07

Issue

Section

Articles