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Women and Journalism (Hardcover, Annotated Ed)
Loot Price: R3,982
Discovery Miles 39 820
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Women and Journalism (Hardcover, Annotated Ed)
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"Women and Journalism" offers a comprehensive analysis of the
roles, status and experiences of women journalists in the United
States and Britain. Drawing on a variety of sources, the authors
investigate the challenges women have faced in their struggles to
become established in the profession from the mid-19th century
onward. With a particular focus on news journalism, the book
provides an account of the gendered structuring of journalism in
print, radio and television and speculates about women's role in
the new sector of online journalism.
L Comparing and women's advancement in journalism in United States
and Britain, the book identifies a number of key differences and
the shared constraints that operate against women's progression in
journalism in both countries. The authors argue that a gendered
organization of newsroom cultures means that women are marginal in
fields of "serious news" reporting. The authors argue that compared
to male colleagues, women journalists are often considered open to
criticism on their sex lives, parental status and appearance from
audiences and management alike.
The book is unique in examining women's contribution to both
mainstream and alternative news media. It examines the strategies
women have adopted to gain power in a male-dominated media
environment, charting women's independent press, radio, television
and Internet initiatives in the United States and Britain: from the
suffrage press to "Spare Rib" in the UK, from the abolitionist
campaigners to" Off Our Backs" and "Ms Magazine" in the US; and
from women's community radio, television news programs to women's
Internet newsgroups in both countries. In stark contrast to the
accent onwomen's rights in alternative news media, however,
mainstream women journalists are central to the recent rise of a
style of journalism distinguished by an emphasis on confessional,
therapy "news" and market-led postfeminism. The authors conclude by
addressing women's contribution to public discourse and their
potential future role in the age of interactive news media and ask
whether the concept of the "public sphere" is relevant to women in
journalism.
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