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Rebecca Darley's avatar

Absolutely loved this read - thank you! I know you are pleading for a more recent sense of history, but as a historian of the much more distant past (I love CE dates with 3 digits), the same can, judiciously, be said for any historical perspective.

Seeing things in terms of 100- or 1000-year patterns doesn't mean I don't care about what is happening now but it helps to quiet the panic and identify the really big stuff (which often isn't headline-grabbing). As you rightly say, no comparison, no making sense!

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Rene Cremonese's avatar

Great article. Thanks.

Would be interested in your view on another angle to context in journalism. Take a complex issue that a journalist thinks is important for people to learn about. Seems unlikely that an article which opens with lots of stats and context will attract interest. So, the article will begin with an example story about an individual or a family. This does the trick and I am more likely to read and to be drawn in to learn more because there is emotion, risk at play. I can see myself in that situation and how I might feel. Hopefully, at this point additional context is provided that allows me to understand if this truly might affect me, my community or my country.

Unfortunately, very often we are presented with an issue, risk or problem only or primarily from that emotional perspective. Multiple individual narratives might be provided, all of which are emotional and seem risky and scary to me. I am drawn to think that my family is also at great risk. This is especially the case if the potential consequences are serious and significant. And this is easy to conclude as I have just read about or watched a person devastated in a hospital bed or gutted by the loss of a loved one. For a recent example, I am thinking about multiple stories on the national news about equine encephalitis. The death of a baby from this disease was tragic but it took a long time to learn it was one of 8 (I think) cases in Canada.

Or a couple of years back a week long series about sexual predators within the youth sports world. Each incident cited presented a debilitating situation for the individuals and families concerned. And numbers provided seemed large - hundreds of coaches convicted of sex offences against their athletes. Reports eventually made it clear that this was over a 20 year period but nowhere did it indicate over how many coaches overall. Hundreds of such cases are devastating in each case but does not help me decide whether the risk to my children in sport is so great that I should consider not registering them.

This journalistic method may draw my attention but its focus on emotion (and negativity as you point out), leaves too many people believing that they and theirs are directly at risk of many things where they are massively unlikely to be affected. And this is a standard part of commentary on social media where a single lurid incident is used to generalize a problem or a person’s position/argument. Which then also seems to justify ‘solving’ a complex problem with one preferred answer.

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