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Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage

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2020
Authors
Krstić, Aleksandra
Parry, Katy
Aiello, Giorgia
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
The 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade represents a critical moment in the story of Serbia's democratisation process and highlights the threat that right-wing extremism poses to democratic rights and personal freedoms. Through a focus on patterns of visibility and visuality in the coverage of different protagonists in the streets of Belgrade, we explore the ways in which distinct communities perform their affinities, their right to be seen in public spaces, and rejection of 'the other'. We conduct a visual framing analysis across four news programmes (RTS, Prva TV, TV B92 and Pink TV), emphasising the stylistic-semiotic choices which work to construct the contested spaces of the city. In shifting attention to how the news images work to create the spaces of political 'appearance' and the potentials for political agency through mediated visibility, the article explores the uneasy ambivalence of the democratisation process for authorities and the resulting marginalisation of the lesbian, gay, bi...sexual and transgender community in news coverage.

Keywords:
Belgrade / democratisation / Europeanisation / LGBT / Pride Parade / Serbia / television news / visibility / visual framing / visuality
Source:
European Journal of Cultural Studies, 2020, 23, 2, 165-183
Publisher:
  • Sage Publications Ltd, London
Funding / projects:
  • Media, Conflict and Democratisation (EU-613370)

DOI: 10.1177/1367549417743042

ISSN: 1367-5494

WoS: 000527537600002

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85083671330
[ Google Scholar ]
5
URI
http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/777
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' papers
Institution/Community
FPN
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Krstić, Aleksandra
AU  - Parry, Katy
AU  - Aiello, Giorgia
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/777
AB  - The 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade represents a critical moment in the story of Serbia's democratisation process and highlights the threat that right-wing extremism poses to democratic rights and personal freedoms. Through a focus on patterns of visibility and visuality in the coverage of different protagonists in the streets of Belgrade, we explore the ways in which distinct communities perform their affinities, their right to be seen in public spaces, and rejection of 'the other'. We conduct a visual framing analysis across four news programmes (RTS, Prva TV, TV B92 and Pink TV), emphasising the stylistic-semiotic choices which work to construct the contested spaces of the city. In shifting attention to how the news images work to create the spaces of political 'appearance' and the potentials for political agency through mediated visibility, the article explores the uneasy ambivalence of the democratisation process for authorities and the resulting marginalisation of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community in news coverage.
PB  - Sage Publications Ltd, London
T2  - European Journal of Cultural Studies
T1  - Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage
EP  - 183
IS  - 2
SP  - 165
VL  - 23
DO  - 10.1177/1367549417743042
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Krstić, Aleksandra and Parry, Katy and Aiello, Giorgia",
year = "2020",
abstract = "The 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade represents a critical moment in the story of Serbia's democratisation process and highlights the threat that right-wing extremism poses to democratic rights and personal freedoms. Through a focus on patterns of visibility and visuality in the coverage of different protagonists in the streets of Belgrade, we explore the ways in which distinct communities perform their affinities, their right to be seen in public spaces, and rejection of 'the other'. We conduct a visual framing analysis across four news programmes (RTS, Prva TV, TV B92 and Pink TV), emphasising the stylistic-semiotic choices which work to construct the contested spaces of the city. In shifting attention to how the news images work to create the spaces of political 'appearance' and the potentials for political agency through mediated visibility, the article explores the uneasy ambivalence of the democratisation process for authorities and the resulting marginalisation of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community in news coverage.",
publisher = "Sage Publications Ltd, London",
journal = "European Journal of Cultural Studies",
title = "Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage",
pages = "183-165",
number = "2",
volume = "23",
doi = "10.1177/1367549417743042"
}
Krstić, A., Parry, K.,& Aiello, G.. (2020). Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage. in European Journal of Cultural Studies
Sage Publications Ltd, London., 23(2), 165-183.
https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549417743042
Krstić A, Parry K, Aiello G. Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage. in European Journal of Cultural Studies. 2020;23(2):165-183.
doi:10.1177/1367549417743042 .
Krstić, Aleksandra, Parry, Katy, Aiello, Giorgia, "Visualising the politics of appearance in times of democratisation: An analysis of the 2010 Belgrade Pride Parade television coverage" in European Journal of Cultural Studies, 23, no. 2 (2020):165-183,
https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549417743042 . .

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