The sphere of consensus in a polarized media system: The case of Turkey during the catastrophic coup attempt

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Date

2019

Authors

Emre Iseri
Eser Şekercioğlu
Uğur Cevdet Panayırcı

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University of Southern California info@ijoc.org

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Abstract

How does a highly polarized media system respond to a catastrophic event? The July 2016 coup attempt in Turkey provides fertile ground to examine how a catastrophic event has shaped the editorial policies of news media outlets in a highly polarized media system. This article hypothesizes that mainly due to the peculiarities of the Turkish media system even at the time of a catastrophic event the framing strategies of media outlets converge only to a limited degree on a sphere of consensus. Adopting a content analysis methodology we analyze the framing strategies of four national newspapers affiliated with specific sociopolitical camps (the pro-government Sabah the moderate Hürriyet and the oppositional Sözcü and Cumhuriyet). We reach the counterintuitive conclusion that these news outlets used different framing strategies in the immediate aftermath of the coup attempt and that the gap between them widened over the period of analysis. © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Authoritarian Regimes, Catastrophic Event, Content Analysis, Framing, Media Systems, Political Communication, Turkey, Media Systems, Framing, Content Analysis, Turkey, Catastrophic Event, Political Communication, Authoritarian Regimes

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Source

International Journal of Communication

Volume

13

Issue

Start Page

1462

End Page

1486
SCOPUS™ Citations

12

checked on Apr 09, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

9

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