Summary: | The news media’s role in shaping knowledge about mental illness has long been recognised as one
of the primary conduits through which the public learns about people with mental health
conditions. Despite a proliferation of research on media portrayals of mental illness, there seems
to be a lack of studies critically examining how people with mental illness (PwMI) are constructed
in mainstream and independent newspapers, especially in the Malaysian context. The present study
aims to comparatively examine how PwMI are ideologically represented in mainstream and
independent online newspapers. Predicated on van Dijk’s (1980) theory of semantic
macrostructures and van Dijk’s (1998) ideological square model, twelve news reports from each
newspaper were analysed. Findings revealed that the semantic macrostructures constructed from
the news reports mainly centred on the topic of the dangerousness, vulnerability, and human rights
of PwMI. The prominent “othering” of PwMI was particularly evident in both newspapers, as they
were not only depicted as dangerous and violent but also as vulnerable, dependent, and powerless,
in juxtaposition to those without mental illness. In addition to providing insights on how online
newspapers contribute to the ideological construction of PwMI via topicalisation, the study’s
findings have potential implications for media literacy programmes aiming to empower news
consumers with critical reading skills in deconstructing public discourses on mental illness.
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