“Not a Political Virus”: Manufacturing Consent by Czech Public Service Media in the Pandemic

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51480/1899-5101.15.1(30).1

Keywords:

post-politics, pandemic, television, news, critical discourse analysis, objectivity, risk society

Abstract

The article presents an analysis of the news broadcast on Czech public television during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Based on the concept of post-politics, the analysis illustrates how Czech Television created consensus, naturalized the measures adopted by the government, and transformed a potentially political space into one that privileged instrumental and technical solutions. The author argues that the later emergence of protest movements in Czechia may also be related to the first wave of the pandemic being presented in a consensual, post-political form in public service media. This activity prevented society from recognizing the socially unequal impact of the pandemic and the measures aimed at reducing its impact. Dealing with the question of how to represent a world that went through a rapid change, because of a pandemic, the article ends with a plea for agonistic media pluralism.

Author Biography

Jan Motal, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University

Jan Motal, PhD, is an associate professor at the Department of Media Studies and Journalism at Masaryk University (Brno, Czech Republic) and the head of the Center for Media Ethics and Dialogue. His research interests include media ethics and philosophy of dialogue with special emphasis on art theory. In 2016, he published an award-winning monograph Dialogue Through Art.

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Published

2022-06-23

How to Cite

Motal, J. (2022). “Not a Political Virus”: Manufacturing Consent by Czech Public Service Media in the Pandemic. Central European Journal of Communication, 15(1(30), 15-32. https://doi.org/10.51480/1899-5101.15.1(30).1

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Section

Scientific Papers