Bültmann & Gerriets
Journalism Research in Practice
Perspectives on Change, Challenges, and Solutions
von Robert E. Gutsche Jr., Bonnie Brennen
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
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ISBN: 978-1-000-07162-7
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Erschienen am 25.11.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 168 Seiten

Preis: 54,49 €

Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Journalism Research in Practice is a unique collection by leading scholars from the field of Journalism Studies who have revisited their previous work with the intent of asking more questions about how journalism looks, works, and is preparing for the future.



Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. is Senior Lecturer in Critical Digital Media Practice at Lancaster University, UK. He is author or editor of The Trump Presidency, Journalism, and Democracy; Reimaging Journalism and Social Order in a Fragmented Media World; and Geographies of Journalism, all published by Routledge.

Bonnie Brennen is Professor Emerita at Marquette University, USA. Her research addresses relationships between media, culture, technology, and society. She is the author or editor of seven books and one novel and her research has also been published in academic journals and edited books.



INTRODUCTION Journalism Research in Practice: Strategies, Innovation, and Approaches to Change
1. Hero or Anti-Hero? Journalists and their Stories
2. Journalists' Perceptions of Mass Shooting Coverage and Factors Influencing Those Perceptions
3. Media Criticism from the Far-Right: Attacking from Many Angles
4. Public Media and Marginalized Publics: Online and Offline Engagement Strategies and Local Storytelling Networks
5: "Listen First, Then Ask!" Listening-based Journalistic Questioning Training Methods
6: "I Was Doing a Good Deed": Exploring the Motivations of Photo Story Subjects in Granting Photojournalists Access
7: Is Journalism Going Global? Finding Answers in Quantitative Studies Employing the Concepts of the "Culture Peg" and the "Culture Link"
8: Challenging Data-Driven Journalism
9: A Tale of Two Tragedies: Culpability and Innocence in American Journalism
10: Five Things We Should Learn from the Messiness of Participation
11: Disruptive Media Events: Balancing Editorial Control and Open Dissent in the Aftermath of Terror
12: Insights from a Comparative Study into Convergence Culture in European Newsrooms
13: Automating Complex News Stories by Capturing News Events as Data
14: Remaining in Control with an Illusion of Interactivity: The Paternalistic Side of Data Journalism
15: "Don't be Stupid." The Role of Social Media Policies in Journalistic Boundary-Setting
16: What a Story! Interpretative Rhetoric in News Media's Facebook Updates
17: How Engagement with Journalists on Twitter Reduces Public Perceptions of Media Bias
18: Fact-checkers as Entrepreneurs
19: Careers in Modern Professional Journalism: A Case Study of NYC Journalist Network Histories 2011-2015
20: From Analog Dollars to Digital Dimes: A Look into the Performance of US Newspapers
21: The Two Faces of Janus: Web Analytics Companies and the Shifting Culture of News
22: Where Do Facts Matter? The Digital Paradox in Magazines' Fact-checking Processes
23: Entrepreneurs and Idealists - Freelance Journalists at the Intersection of Autonomy and Constraints
24: Ethical Boundaries among Freelance Journalists
25: Total Eclipse of the Social: What Journalism Can Learn from the Fundamentals of Facebook
26: Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News
27: Local Journalism and the Information Needs of Local Communities: Toward a Scalable Assessment Approach
28: Solutions Journalism: The Effects of Including Solution Information in News Stories About Social Problems


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