Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Comparative politics
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News After Trump - Journalism's Crisis of Relevance in a Changed Media Culture (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,708
Discovery Miles 27 080
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News After Trump - Journalism's Crisis of Relevance in a Changed Media Culture (Hardcover)
Series: Journalism and Political Communication Unbound
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R2,718
Discovery Miles: 27 180
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Donald Trump might have been the loudest and most powerful voice
maligning the integrity of news media in a generation, but his
unrelenting attacks draw from a stew of resentment, wariness,
cynicism, and even hatred toward the press that has been simmering
for years. At one time, journalism's centrality in reporting and
interpreting important events was relatively unquestioned when a
limited number of channels and voices produced a consensus-based
news environment. The collapse of this environment has sparked a
moment of reckoning within and outside journalism, particularly as
professional news outlets struggle to remain solvent. Alternative
voices compete for attention with and criticize the work and
motivations of journalists, even as a growing number of journalists
question their core norms and practices. News After Trump considers
these struggles over journalism to be about the very relevance of
journalism as an institutional form of knowledge production. At the
heart of this questioning is a struggle to define what truthful
accounts look like and who ought to create them or determine them
in a rapidly changing media culture. Through an extensive
accounting of Trump's relationship with the press, and drawing on
in-depth interviews with journalists and textual analysis of news
events, editorials, social media, and trade-press discussions, the
book rethinks the relevance of journalism by recognizing the limits
of objectivity and the way in which journalism positions certain
actors as authority figures while rendering the less socially
powerful invisible or flawed. This ethos of detachment has staved
off vital questions about how journalism connects to its audiences,
how it creates enduring value in people's lives (or not), and how
diversity needs to be understood jointly at the level of
production, reporting, and audience in order to rebuild trust.
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