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Unusual suspects : a newspaper's coverage of a scuba diving rescue and journalism's role in narrating Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Janine LittleJanine Little
Brisbane’s Courier-Mail newspaper ran a fantastic story a couple of years ago about a couple left at sea behind by their tour boat, after going scuba diving. The story suggested American diver Allyson Dalton and her British partner Richard Neely ignored advice when they ventured away from a lagoon where the tour boat was anchored. But the focus was on how Neely and Dalton survived by treading water for 19 hours at Paradise Reef, part of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef, not so much (yet) on how fortunate they were not to be attacked by sharks. It would not be long, however, before that old journalistic maxim that implores practitioners to ‘question every assertion, doubt every claim’ shaped the reportage into an extended narrative about chequebook journalism, credibility, and culpability.

The scuba dive rescue story analysis presented here reflects contemporary journalism’s role in the formation of ideas about cultural value and character, and in more complex determinations of who gets a participatory stake in the formation of national narratives. As such, the article concludes with some signposts toward a critical approach to journalism-centred studies of culture in Australia.

History

Journal

Ejournalist : a refereed media journal

Volume

11

Issue

2

Pagination

21 - 30

Publisher

Faculty of Informatics and Communication, Central Queensland University

Location

North Rockhampton, Qld.

ISSN

1444-741X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Central Queensland University

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