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Juska, Arunas. 2007.
"Discourses on Rurality in Post-Socialist News Media: The Case of
Lithuania's Leading Daily 'Lietuvos Rytas' (1991-2004)," Journal of Rural
Studies, 23(2), pp. 238-253
Abstract. The Soviet regime defined rurality as a
collective-farm or kolkhoz-based society. Since the late 1980s such a
state-imposed definition of rurality was rapidly unraveling under the
tensions and conflicts produced by perestroika and post-socialist
reforms. In the new politics of the rural, the role that the news media
was playing in shaping public opinion on rural matters was of growing
importance. The paper analyzes 3827 articles on rural issues published
during the post-independence period (1991–2004) in the leading
Lithuanian daily ‘‘Lietuvos Rytas’’ (LR). Two types of discourses in
rural coverage are discerned. During the 1990s rural coverage in LR was
reflective of conflicts and tensions between relatively prosperous urban
classes which benefited from post-socialist reforms and pauperized rural
population. Rurality was increasingly associated with the failure of
‘‘the moral modernization’’ of the rural population. Rural population
was stigmatized as deficient in values and character, remaining in the
grips of the Soviet mentality and state dependency and, therefore,
unable to take advantage of opportunities created by the reforms. Since
the early 2000s when economic situation in the country improved
significantly and Lithuania started negotiations on European Union
membership, rurality in LR coverage was gradually re-defined in EU terms
as a socio-spacial entity shaped by regional, national, and local
policies promoting multifunctionality of rural areas, well-being of
rural communities, and active citizenship. Factors that influenced
changes in rural discourses are analyzed. Impacts of changing discourses
on rural identities, rural politics and policies are discussed.
Keywords: Lithuania; News media; Discourse analysis; Discourses of rurality;
Rural poverty; Lithuanian agriculture
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