Media and Communication
Volume 7, Issue 2 Refugee Crises Disclosed, 2019, Pages 275-288

Narratives of the refugee crisis: A comparative study of mainstream-media and twitter (Article) (Open Access)

Nerghes A. , Lee J.-S.*
  • a Digital Humanities Lab, KNAW Humanities Cluster, Amsterdam, 1012DK, Netherlands
  • b Department of Media and Communication, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, 3000DR, Netherlands

Abstract

The European refugee crisis received heightened attention at the beginning of September 2015, when images of the drowned child, Aylan Kurdi, surfaced across mainstream and social media. While the flows of displaced persons, especially from the Middle East into Europe, had been ongoing until that date, this event and its coverage sparked a media firestorm. Mainstream-media content plays a major role in shaping discourse about events such as the refugee crisis, while social media’s participatory affordances allow for the narratives to be perpetuated, challenged, and injected with new perspectives. In this study, the perspectives and narratives of the refugee crisis from the mainstream news and Twitter-in the days following Aylan’s death-are compared and contrasted. Themes are extracted through topic modeling (LDA) and they reveal how news and Twitter converge and also diverge. We show that in the initial stages of a crisis and following the tragic death of Aylan, public discussion on Twitter was highly positive. Unlike the mainstream-media, Twitter offered an alternative and multifaceted narrative, not bound by geo-politics, raising awareness and calling for solidarity and empathy towards those affected. This study demonstrates how mainstream and social media form a new and complementary media space, where narratives are created and transformed. © 2019 by the authors.

Author Keywords

Narratives Twitter Social media Networks Mainstream-media Refugee crisis

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070913657&doi=10.17645%2fmac.v7i2.1983&partnerID=40&md5=afa2a161adf2cf621c7f3742efb7771a

DOI: 10.17645/mac.v7i2.1983
ISSN: 21832439
Cited by: 1
Original Language: English