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The race riots of 2001 in some British cities remarked a considerable lack of inter-ethnic harmony. The violence that plagued cities like Bradford, Oldham and Burnley was officially read as symptomatic of the fragility and absence of common core values. One central norm was the belief in a common national identity (Britishness). A number of local and national race-related reports were produced to champion the hegemonic official discourses that “the absence of community cohesion is basically the end product of the absence of a shared British national identity”. Based on the British cultural critic Stuart Hall’s Reception theory, this article postulates that an influential news agency like BBC News Online is expected to decode and then encode the official discourses of community cohesion and Britishness in tune with the mainstream version. However, my critical and interpretative analysis of some electronically produced articles of BBC yielded some interesting findings. BBC News Online, despite its “official-ness” did not read official hegemonic discourse in an absolute preferred way. There are important nuances in its readings. Such nuances reveal that audiences (in this study BBC News Online is treated as an audience to official discourses) are not passive consumers of hegemonies. They have their own choices and constraints which shape their decoding of and re-encoding of their world realities. The basic target of this article is to show the way BBC News Online reproduced, if any, the dominant discourses of social cohesion as a guarantee of Britishness and vice-versa.

Hassen Zriba. (2014) “Readings” of Britishness and community cohesion in BBC News Online during 2001 race riots, Journal of Media Studies, Volume 29, Issue 1.
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