Themes Used to Discursively Construct the COVID-19 Pandemic in Kenya’s Newspaper Headlines

Authors

  • Brian Munyao Mulonzi

    Department of Humanities, School of Education and Social Sciences, University of Embu, 6-60100 Embu, Kenya

  • Mugambi Cyrus Ngumo

    Department of Humanities, School of Education and Social Sciences, University of Embu, 6-60100 Embu, Kenya

  • Lillian Kemunto Omoke

    Department of Humanities, School of Education and Social Sciences, University of Embu, 6-60100 Embu, Kenya

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30564/fls.v6i3.6651
Received: 20 May 2024 | Revised: 20 June 2024 | Accepted: 28 June 2024 | Published Online: 18 July 2024

Abstract

This study investigates the themes that discursively construct the COVID-19 pandemic in Kenya’s newspaper headlines, specifically focusing on their role in structuring communication related to the COVID-19 pandemic. While prior research has examined news discourse in various contexts, thematic analysis in Kenya’s news reporting has received limited attention. The study examines 59 COVID-19-related headlines drawn from The Standard and the Daily Nation newspapers. The methodology draws from the Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) model, and specifically employs the Top-Down Approach of sampling texts as espoused by Mautner. Van Dijk argues that those who control discourse indirectly manipulate people’s thoughts and actions. This observation is corroborated by the study’s findings which reveal that Kenya’s print media shaped the COVID-19 discourse through the choice and framing of themes such as bondage, death, economy, education and COVID-19 research and search for vaccines. The analysis shows that Kenya’s print media largely constructed the themes in a negative way and this created a sense of crisis and fear among the populace. These feelings of fear and crisis were exacerbated because the themes encompassed aspects that are crucial to Kenyans, all of which were threatened by COVID-19. Proactive measures such as online learning during the pandemic were almost wholly excluded from the COVID-19 discourse. The media created unequal power relation with the readership by constructing itself as the reservoir of knowledge about COVID-19. The reader was positioned as subordinate and in dire need of guidance. This was an important discursive strategy for legitimizing the authority of the media about the pandemic. It is hoped that this study will make significant contribution to the fields of discourse, communication and media, as it reveals how media discourse plays a key role in shaping our understanding of pandemics.

Keywords:

CDA; COVID-19; Discourse; Newspaper representation; Pandemic; Themes

References

Daily Nation. 2022. Karua: army of foreign hackers rigged the Kenyan election. Available from: https://epaper.nation.africa/product/daily-nation (cited 23 August 2022).

Fairclough, N., 1992. Discourse and text: linguistic and intertextual analysis within discourse analysis. Discourse and Society. 3(2), 193–217. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926592003002004

Fairclough, N., 2013. Language and power (2nd). Routledge: Harlow, UK.

Feijen, H.L.M., 2016. The opinion Dutch people have on Ebola on Twitter versus what message about Ebola is spread in Dutch newspapers: a comparison [Unpublished master’s thesis]. Wageningen: Wageningen University. Available from: https://edepot.wur.nl/376532 (cited 5 March 2024).

Freedman, D.O., Wilder-Smith, A., 2020. Isolation, quarantine, social distancing and community containment: Pivotal role for old-style public health measures in the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak. Journal of Travel Medicine. 27(2), 1–4. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/taaa020

GeoPoll., 2022. The GeoPoll Kenya Establishment Survey 2022 Report. Available from: https://www.geopoll.com/blog/kenya-establishment-survey-2022-report/ (cited 5 April 2024).

Habwe, J., Ndung’u, M., 2022. WAR metaphor strategies in expressing COVID-19 messages in presidential speeches in Kenya in 2020. Ghana Journal of Linguistics. 11(2), 74–96.

Joye, S., 2010. News discourses on distant suffering: A critical discourse analysis of the 2003 sars outbreak. Discourse and Society. 21(5), 586–601. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926510373988

Lamichhane, M., 2017. The stylistic features of newspaper headlines [PhD thesis]. Kathmandu: Faculty of Education Tribhuvan University.

Mautner, G., 2008. Analyzing newspapers, magazines and other print media. In: Wodak, R., Krzyzanowski, M. (eds). Qualitative discourse analysis in the social sciences.1. Bloomsbury Publishing: London. pp: 30–53.

Media Council of Kenya, 2022. Status of media in Kenya survey report. Available from: https://mediacouncil.or.ke/sites/default/files/downloads/State%20of%20Kenya%27s%20Media%202022%20Report.pdf (cited 15 March 2024).

Moinani, A.M., Barasa, M.N., 2021. Is disease a war? A critical discourse analysis of the COVID-19 discourse in Kenya. International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Sciences. 5(3), 411–417. DOI: https://doi.org/10.47772/IJRISS.2021.5327

Mulonzi, B., Ngumo, M., Omoke, L., 2023. Research article. Research Journal in Advanced Humanities. 4(4), 60–74. DOI: https://doi.org/10.58256/rjah.v4i4.1320

Ngila, F., 2022. Did hackers manipulate Kenya's Presidential poll? Quartz. Available from: https://qz.com/did-hackers-manipulate-kenyas-presidential-poll-results-1849460625 (cited 10 May 2024).

Nor, N.F.M., Zulcafli, A.S., 2020. Corpus driven analysis of news reports about covid-19 in a malaysian online newspaper. GEMA Online Journal of Language Studies. 20(3), 199–220. DOI: https://doi.org/10.17576/gema-2020-2003-12

Richardson, J.E., 2007. Social Practices: Journalism and the Material World. JE Richardson. Analysing Newspapers. An Approach from Critical Discourse Analysis. Palgrave Macmillan: New York. pp. 114–148.

Sasala, J., Mudogo, B., David, B., 2022. Vital Relations in the Metaphors of Covid-19 in Lukabaras. 19(3), 82–100.

Tareen, S.R., Nayab, D., Dilawer, S., 2021. Exploring ideological construction through COVID-19 related headlines in selected Pakistani newspapers. Review of Applied Management and Social Sciences. 4(3), 703–714. DOI: https://doi.org/10.47067/ramss.v4i3.177

Tshiswaka, D.I., Whembolua, G.L.S., Conserve, D.F., 2017. A qualitative analysis of newspaper response to the ebola outbreak in Central Africa. The Journal of Pan African Studies. 10(1), 224–239.

Van Dijk, T.A., 1988a. News Analysis: Case Studies of International and National News as Discourse in the Press. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers: New Jersey.

Van Dijk, T.A., 1988b. News as Discourse. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers: New Jersey.

Van Dijk, T.A., 1993. Discourse, Power and Access. In: C.R. Caldas (ed.). Studies in Critical Discourse Analysis. Routledge: London.

Van Dijk, T.A., 1998. Ideology. A multidisciplinary approach. Sage Publications Ltd: London. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4135/9781446217856

Van Dijk, T.A., 2008. Discourse and Power. Palgrave Macmillan: New York.

Van Dijk, T.A., 2009. Critical discourse studies: A sociocognitive approach. In: R. Wodak, M. Meyer (eds). Methods of Critical Discourse Analysis. Sage Publications Ltd: London. pp. 62–86.

Van Leeuwen, 2008. Discourse and Practice: New Tools for Critical Discourse Analysis. Oxford University Press: Oxford. pp. 172

World Health Organization, 2020. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) : Situation Report, 55. Available from: https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200315-sitrep-55-covid-19.pdf (cited 6 February 2024).

Downloads

How to Cite

Munyao Mulonzi, B., Cyrus Ngumo, M., & Kemunto Omoke, L. (2024). Themes Used to Discursively Construct the COVID-19 Pandemic in Kenya’s Newspaper Headlines. Forum for Linguistic Studies, 6(3), 387–401. https://doi.org/10.30564/fls.v6i3.6651

Issue

Article Type

Article