Where there is panic, the media are close by
A pragmatic study of the alleviation of COVID-19 panic by the Chinese state media
The widespread panic associated with media exposure is a serious challenge to worldwide governments in the prevention and
control of the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, alleviating negative social emotions, particularly panic, is an urgent issue for the state
media. By using the comments of a Weibo post from The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League, drawing on the notion of
extrinsic emotion regulation, this paper conducts a detailed analysis of negative emotions regulation through discourse
strategies by the Chinese state media and their effects in the context of COVID-19. The results demonstrate that, by exploiting language
strategies, the state media can arouse positive emotions amongst users, thus distract the public from experiencing negative emotions. In
addition, the state media participate in online interactions, thereby creating positive public emotional spaces. This study indicates that
digital platforms like Weibo, occasionally equipped with emotionalized narrative, are of significant value in the regulation of negative
emotions in public crisis contexts.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Literature review
- 2.1The role played by the media and discourse in the alleviation of negative emotions
- 2.2Media exposure and public panic during the COVID-19 crisis
- 3.Theoretical framework
- 4.Method
- 4.1Data collection
- 4.2Data analysis
- 5.Results and discussion
- 5.1The discourse strategies used in the panic alleviation discourse of the Chinese state media
- 5.2The effect of panic alleviation by the Chinese state media
- 5.2.1A one-way report of users’ emotions
- 5.2.2An interactive analysis of the users’ emotions
- 6.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
-
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