Saints and witnesses: Virtue and vocation in the memorialization of the Western conflict journalist
How are Western journalists who are killed in the course of their work remembered? Using the biographies of journalists killed covering conflict, this article investigates the discursive repertoires through which the memorialization of journalists killed while reporting conflict is accomplished. The authors argue that such journalists are consistently constructed as humanitarian, cosmopolitan witnesses engaged in supererogatory moral projects involving justice and voice for those outside of these journalists’ geopolitical home communities. This particular articulation appears to herald a recent shift in the memorialization of the journalistic dead, although it is continuous with longer discourses in fields such as photojournalism and its idea of the ‘concerned photographer’. We speculate that this shift is consistent with material changes in the field – in particular, the precaritization of conflict reporting driving journalists into the material and social world of professional humanitarianism, whose discourses around the moral worth and cosmopolitan nature of the work have colonized the subfield of conflict reporting.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
Media, War & ConflictISSN
1750-6352Publisher
SAGE PublicationsPublisher URL
External DOI
Issue
2Volume
17Page range
196-212Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
Institution
University of SussexFull text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes