Restoration of Public Self-Image: Ideological Circles in the Mediatization of Government-Migrant Worker Relations during Covid 19

Published in Discourse and Communication, 2023

Recommended citation: Lazar, M.M., Tham, A., & Wang, W. (2023) "Restoration of Public Self-Image: Ideological Circles in the Mediatization of Government-Migrant Worker Relations during Covid 19 " Discourse and Communication. https://doi.org/10.1177/17504813231205823

This article focuses on migrant workers (MWs) during Covid-19 in Singapore. A second wave of Covid-19 transmissions in MW dormitories in 2020 had cast a spotlight on this vulnerable population, amidst inter/national criticisms of the national government for oversight. From a critical discourse studies perspective, we examine how the national newspaper attempted to restore a positive self-image of the Singapore government, through the mobilization of ‘ideological circles’. These ideological circles involve, variously, positive and negative discursive presentational strategies of the Singapore government, its MWs, selected regional governments, and their MWs. The study unpacks the ideological mechanisms at work in the restoration of the government’s reputation as well as examines the implications for MWs in Singapore as perpetual ‘others’.