Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995

In a joint research project of three universities the construction of national identities by mainstream print media was analyzed in historical perspective. The goal of the content-analytical approach was to find out how the media constructed a concept of nationality and to detect the historical chan...

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Main Authors: Andreas Mattenschlager, Hubert Riedle
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Berlin Regener Publishing House 2003-04-01
Series:Conflict & Communication Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.cco.regener-online.de/2003_1/pdf_2003_1/mattenschlager_riedle.pdf
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spelling doaj-88f53c5f26824c72a2df2a7619ac171c2020-11-24T20:55:19ZdeuBerlin Regener Publishing HouseConflict & Communication Online1618-07472003-04-0121122Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995Andreas MattenschlagerHubert RiedleIn a joint research project of three universities the construction of national identities by mainstream print media was analyzed in historical perspective. The goal of the content-analytical approach was to find out how the media constructed a concept of nationality and to detect the historical changes which took place between 1945 and 1995. The article presents the results of the German and Swiss country studies. In the German study the focus was on processes of change in the construction of national identities in interaction with the enormous political and societal changes that have taken place in Germany since the Second World War. In the years since the capitulation of National Socialist Germany (1945), during which Germany was divided into the FRG and the GDR (1949) until reunification (1990), several political and societal events occurred which allow us to infer great effects on national identities. On the basis of the reporting of historical aspects and of German-German relationships, in particular differences between reporting in the East (GDR and new German states, [neue Bundesländer], NBL) and West Germany (FRG and old states [Alte Bundesländer], ABL) are illuminated. It was found that the GDR press clearly tried to establish a new national (GDR) identity. Identity-forming themes were presented and used in a distorted form. The West German press, to the contrary, employed more subtle mechanisms and made (in contrast to the NS period - as did East German reporting as well) more references to a common German past. The Swiss study made a quantitative content analysis of identity production by four newspapers in German-speaking Switzerland against the background of the relevant identity dimensions and a qualitative investigation of historical and social transformations throughout the study period. Some of the results confirmed previous expectations, for example, the continuing Western integration of "neutral" Switzerland. However, in the following contribution the less obvious aspects of identity modernization and growing European integration will be particularly emphasized. Whereas differences in coverage among the four papers studied were of comparatively minor importance, a continuous time-dependent change could be demonstrated, reflecting the modernization of national identities, particularly since the 1970s: Uncritical expressions of national pride declined, traditional institutions like the army lost some of their previous influence, and self-presentation as a "unique" nation became less common. This coincides clearly with the country's growing European integration. http://www.cco.regener-online.de/2003_1/pdf_2003_1/mattenschlager_riedle.pdfconstruction of national identitiespolitical and societal changesdifferences between East and West-GermanyWestern integration of Switzerlandmodernization of national identitiesEuropean integration
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreas Mattenschlager
Hubert Riedle
spellingShingle Andreas Mattenschlager
Hubert Riedle
Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
Conflict & Communication Online
construction of national identities
political and societal changes
differences between East and West-Germany
Western integration of Switzerland
modernization of national identities
European integration
author_facet Andreas Mattenschlager
Hubert Riedle
author_sort Andreas Mattenschlager
title Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
title_short Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
title_full Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
title_fullStr Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
title_full_unstemmed Media construction of national identities in Germany and Switzerland, 1946-1995
title_sort media construction of national identities in germany and switzerland, 1946-1995
publisher Berlin Regener Publishing House
series Conflict & Communication Online
issn 1618-0747
publishDate 2003-04-01
description In a joint research project of three universities the construction of national identities by mainstream print media was analyzed in historical perspective. The goal of the content-analytical approach was to find out how the media constructed a concept of nationality and to detect the historical changes which took place between 1945 and 1995. The article presents the results of the German and Swiss country studies. In the German study the focus was on processes of change in the construction of national identities in interaction with the enormous political and societal changes that have taken place in Germany since the Second World War. In the years since the capitulation of National Socialist Germany (1945), during which Germany was divided into the FRG and the GDR (1949) until reunification (1990), several political and societal events occurred which allow us to infer great effects on national identities. On the basis of the reporting of historical aspects and of German-German relationships, in particular differences between reporting in the East (GDR and new German states, [neue Bundesländer], NBL) and West Germany (FRG and old states [Alte Bundesländer], ABL) are illuminated. It was found that the GDR press clearly tried to establish a new national (GDR) identity. Identity-forming themes were presented and used in a distorted form. The West German press, to the contrary, employed more subtle mechanisms and made (in contrast to the NS period - as did East German reporting as well) more references to a common German past. The Swiss study made a quantitative content analysis of identity production by four newspapers in German-speaking Switzerland against the background of the relevant identity dimensions and a qualitative investigation of historical and social transformations throughout the study period. Some of the results confirmed previous expectations, for example, the continuing Western integration of "neutral" Switzerland. However, in the following contribution the less obvious aspects of identity modernization and growing European integration will be particularly emphasized. Whereas differences in coverage among the four papers studied were of comparatively minor importance, a continuous time-dependent change could be demonstrated, reflecting the modernization of national identities, particularly since the 1970s: Uncritical expressions of national pride declined, traditional institutions like the army lost some of their previous influence, and self-presentation as a "unique" nation became less common. This coincides clearly with the country's growing European integration.
topic construction of national identities
political and societal changes
differences between East and West-Germany
Western integration of Switzerland
modernization of national identities
European integration
url http://www.cco.regener-online.de/2003_1/pdf_2003_1/mattenschlager_riedle.pdf
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