/ 1968

ONE PSYCHOLOGICAL-MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDY OF CHARACTEROLOGY

/ 1968

INTERPRETATIVITY OF NEWSPAPER REPORTING

Since the competition in the media market has been constantly growing in the last few decades, it could be expected that, fighting for citizens’ trust, media contents would become of higher quality. However, we witness that quite opposite process is ongoing and that interpretation as the core characteristic of high quality press is often neglected in the newspaper reporting. In order for readers to understand the problems journalists write about, it is necessary to present much more than just factual information to them since every reader is interested in what is happening in the society he lives in, and even more so in how such happenings will effect him personally. Exactly for this reason, there is a need to look into the interpretativity of domestic press which has gained the highest readers’ trust in the analysed period, with the aim to determine the level of interpretativity and engaged journalist approach – the basic elements of credible interpretation, yet most oftenly neglected.

/ 1968

LIFE BESIDE ITSELF OR THE CRAVING FOR DEATH

/ 1968

IMAGES OF AN IMPOSSIBLE EVENT

The text puts into focus the changing nature, dramatic actuality and expanded (bio-ethical) meaning of the suicidal phenomenon as a global cultural and media symptom of the first decade of the 21st century. Starting from radical examples of a suicidal protest as a political death ritual (the nature of which is here conceived by victims’ struggle for freedom, respect of human rights and emancipation of the oppressed working-class people), the analysis is supported by theoretical backgrounds among which the most remarkable place has been reserved for a study about the history of self-immolation by the British sociologist Michael Biggs. The text attempts to open up new fields of interpretation bordering the phenomenon of the image, on the one hand, and the phenomenon of suicide, on the other, in the context of contemporary everyday life and media culture under the globalization regime. One of the main goals, towards which this re-articulation of suicide as an ultimate cultural symptom of our times has developed, resides in the need to re-examine the complicity between the iconography of death (as a consequence of the radical self-destructive ritual) and the new imaginary of the ‘political’.

/ 1968

READING THE AMBASSADORS: FUNDAMENTAL NARCISSISM, SUBJECT ANNULMENT, AND YET ANOTHER SKETCH FOR A SELF-DESTRUCTIVE FUNCTION OF THE GAZE

This text was born in the context of preliminary researches of the author in the field of picture analysis in which the function of the gaze itself is a decisive factor in the operation of annulment of the subject of gaze. The text starts from well known theoretic and art history interpretations of the picture The Ambassadors in which Hans Holbein the Younger, in the first half of the sixteeth century, counterposed not only optical nonlinear perspective against the dominant, central geometric perspective but also a geometric (linear, straight) subject to a different one: optical, ex-centric, scopic. The purpose of the paper is to wake up, once again, five centuries later, the static, fixated and focused observer (the symptom and main protagonist of a similarly static, fixated and focused culture of gaze) in order to take a radically different angle. Why? Because in displacing of the Holbein’s observer from the status quo position (by de-centering his gaze, his optical removal from the comfort of a fixed point of observance and his physical moving) the de-centered, excentric observer is offered an opportunity to once again, and every time anew, get actively involved in the historic switch to a different culture of gaze. And a different culture of gaze here implies the kind of culture which, due to a constant overstepping of the limits of the un-culture of gaze, leads us to believe that a different world is possible and leads us to a different perception of the world of the picture and a different perception of the picture of the world – different from the one in which the conservative, atavistic, self-sufficient, patriarchal and “patriotic“ culture keeps us prisoners of a hardened centralistic and stubbornly frontal and undesputably orthodox (straight) view of the world.

/ 1968

REPORTING OF CROATIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS ON 2011 ANTIGOVERNMENT PROTESTS

Mass media are vital for the success of protests. The content analysis of Croatian daily newspapers that reported of the antigovernment protests shows that the key role played the old media, and not Facebook and Twitter as it was in the cases of Moldavia, Iran, Egypt or Tunis. It was mostly the outcome of a different geographical structure of population and the freedom of press, which exists in Croatia and does not in the mentioned Arab countries. The daily newspapers extensively reported of the protests, in the same time announcing and encouraging them. When the quantity of reports declined and the manner of reporting changed (after the protests were held), the interest of protesters for further protests also declined. The analyzed daily newspapers, except for Jutarnji list, prefered protesters actively reporting and giving relevant data about the protest, future activities, and efforts to recruit and mobilize protesters.