Media representations — how ethnic groups are depicted in television, film, print, social media, and online news — profoundly shape both the public’s perception of those groups and the groups’ own sense of belonging and inclusion.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Media representations can either affirm the humanity, diversity, and contributions of ethnic groups (enabling belonging) or reduce them to stereotypes, threats, or curiosities (preventing belonging). When people see their community represented negatively or not at all, it signals that they are not fully part of the national story.
Stuart Hall argued that media representations do not simply reflect reality — they actively construct it. Through the process of encoding and decoding, media producers select, frame, and narrativise social groups in ways that shape audience understanding.
Hall identified several “regimes of representation” applied to ethnic minorities:
- Stereotyping (fixing meaning around a limited set of traits)
- Reduction (reducing a diverse group to one characteristic)
- Naturalisation (making the representation appear normal and inevitable)
Representations That Enable Belonging
Positive and Complex Representation
- Diversity in casting: Australian productions that cast ethnic minority actors in complex, positive roles (e.g. Cleverman — Indigenous sci-fi; Ali’s Wedding — Lebanese-Australian film)
- Indigenous-led media: NITV (National Indigenous Television) provides a platform for Indigenous Australians to produce their own content and stories
- Multicultural broadcasting: SBS was established in 1978 explicitly to serve Australia’s multicultural community; provides programming in multiple languages; its news coverage regularly includes diverse perspectives
- Positive news stories: coverage of achievements by ethnic Australians (sporting success, entrepreneurship, cultural contributions) affirms group membership in the national community
STUDY HINT: SBS and NITV are powerful examples of media institutions that proactively enable belonging. Know their purpose and how they differ from mainstream commercial media.
Representations That Prevent Belonging
Stereotyping and Moral Panics
- “African gang” media narrative (Melbourne, 2017–2019): A series of high-profile media reports described youth crime in Melbourne as an “African gang crisis.” Research showed the crime rates were not exceptional, but the framing (linking African-Australian youth to criminality) produced widespread fear and racism, and caused significant harm to the South Sudanese-Australian community’s sense of belonging.
- Muslim representations post-9/11: Australian media frequently conflated Muslim religious identity with terrorism and extremism, producing othering and discrimination
- Asian representation in mainstream media: Until recently, Asian Australians were systematically underrepresented or represented in stereotyped roles (“model minority,” martial arts, accented English)
- Deficit narratives about Indigenous Australians: Media focus on crime, poverty, and dysfunction in Indigenous communities, with minimal coverage of cultural richness, leadership, and achievement
Mechanisms of Harmful Representation
- Omission: the absence of ethnic minorities from media altogether sends a message of non-belonging
- Tokenism: including one ethnic character in a stereotyped or supporting role while maintaining a predominantly Anglo-white main cast
- Moral panic (Stanley Cohen, 1972): media amplification of concerns about a minority group; creates a climate of fear and suspicion; has been applied repeatedly to non-Anglo ethnic groups in Australia
| Media Pattern |
Example |
Effect on Belonging |
| Moral panic |
“African gang” coverage |
Fear, discrimination, community harm |
| Omission |
Lack of Asian leads in Australian TV |
Invisibility; sense of not belonging |
| Positive representation |
NITV programming |
Affirmation; cultural pride |
| Self-representation |
IndigenousX on social media |
Counters othering; builds community |
EXAM TIP: Always connect media representation to sociological concepts — Stuart Hall (representation, othering, encoding/decoding) and Stanley Cohen (moral panic) are the key theorists here. Name them in your response and apply their concepts to Australian examples.