Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier

This article examines the relation that the media come to bear on the representation of territory by targeting more specifically the "images" that the community press in a suburb of Roubaix (France) produce. The discourse analysis of these newspapers reveals how they "speak" of t...

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Main Author: Bruno Raoul
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université Laval 2011-10-01
Series:Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/communication/2570
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author Bruno Raoul
author_facet Bruno Raoul
author_sort Bruno Raoul
collection DOAJ
description This article examines the relation that the media come to bear on the representation of territory by targeting more specifically the "images" that the community press in a suburb of Roubaix (France) produce. The discourse analysis of these newspapers reveals how they "speak" of the neighbourhood, what territorial representation and what relationships to it are produced, and how such a designated territory "makes sense." At the core of this article is a reflection on the notion of "imagined neighbourhood." The diachronic viewpoint adopted leads the author to conclude that a socio-political conception lies behind the spatial representation of the neighbourhood and to put forward the hypothesis that local newspapers contribute to confine the neighbourhood within its own spatial scene.
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 1189-3788
1920-7344
language fra
publishDate 2011-10-01
publisher Université Laval
record_format Article
series Communication
spelling doaj-art-d5d4c661153f459db5d08da8e0f8503e2025-01-09T11:27:38ZfraUniversité LavalCommunication1189-37881920-73442011-10-0129110.4000/communication.2570Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartierBruno RaoulThis article examines the relation that the media come to bear on the representation of territory by targeting more specifically the "images" that the community press in a suburb of Roubaix (France) produce. The discourse analysis of these newspapers reveals how they "speak" of the neighbourhood, what territorial representation and what relationships to it are produced, and how such a designated territory "makes sense." At the core of this article is a reflection on the notion of "imagined neighbourhood." The diachronic viewpoint adopted leads the author to conclude that a socio-political conception lies behind the spatial representation of the neighbourhood and to put forward the hypothesis that local newspapers contribute to confine the neighbourhood within its own spatial scene.https://journals.openedition.org/communication/2570territoryneighbourhoodgeographical imaginationlocal newspaperRoubaix
spellingShingle Bruno Raoul
Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
Communication
territory
neighbourhood
geographical imagination
local newspaper
Roubaix
title Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
title_full Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
title_fullStr Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
title_full_unstemmed Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
title_short Territoires, images et imaginaires de quartier
title_sort territoires images et imaginaires de quartier
topic territory
neighbourhood
geographical imagination
local newspaper
Roubaix
url https://journals.openedition.org/communication/2570
work_keys_str_mv AT brunoraoul territoiresimagesetimaginairesdequartier