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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Global News explores how media representation is conceived and
enacted in a world of diversity and transborder flows. Among the
'new media' crowding the global mediascape are influential
television outlets that promise viewers alternative vantage points
to those of established Western broadcasters. The different worlds
depicted by Al Jazeera English and Russia Today are compared with
those of CNN International and BBC World. At a time when media
organizations are slashing their budgets for international
reporting, these channels represent a spectrum of financing
solutions and relations to political power, being variously
privately-, publicly-, or state-owned, backed by corporations,
democratic states, authoritarian regimes, and ruling dynasties.
Despite their differences, however, they have much in common. Their
journalists espouse the universal values of professionalism and
objectivity and speak to their global audiences in English. This
book explores the different theoretical worlds of global media
studies, takes a rare look at content, has a comparative
perspective, and moves beyond the conflict frame that has dominated
much of the literature in the field.
Screening Protest brings together a range of scholarly perspectives
on the study of protest mediations on television and in film.
Arguing that the screen is a fruitful, if overlooked, analytical
focus, the book explores how visual narratives of protest wander
across borders - territorial, temporal and generic. Chapters
compare coverage of major protests in recent history by global news
channels like Al Jazeera English, BBC World, CNN International and
RT. They consider how geopolitical agendas, newsroom culture and
the ubiquity of eyewitness footage shape the narration of events
such as the 'Umbrella Revolution' in Hong Kong, anti-austerity
protests in Greece, pro-EU mobilizations in the Ukraine and clashes
in Ferguson. A focus on narrative allows authors to compare such
news stories with popular cultural depictions of the protester, in
films and television series such as The Hunger Games, Robin Hood
and Suffragette. Although focussed on the screen, the scope of the
book is broad, given its exploration of images distributed
worldwide. Written with both scholars and students in mind,
Screening Protest will interest researchers in political science,
sociology, media and film studies, as well as the general reader
interested in current affairs.
Global News explores how media representation is conceived and
enacted in a world of diversity and transborder flows. Among the
'new media' crowding the global mediascape are influential
television outlets that promise viewers alternative vantage points
to those of established Western broadcasters. The different worlds
depicted by Al Jazeera English and Russia Today are compared with
those of CNN International and BBC World. At a time when media
organizations are slashing their budgets for international
reporting, these channels represent a spectrum of financing
solutions and relations to political power, being variously
privately-, publicly-, or state-owned, backed by corporations,
democratic states, authoritarian regimes, and ruling dynasties.
Despite their differences, however, they have much in common. Their
journalists espouse the universal values of professionalism and
objectivity and speak to their global audiences in English. This
book explores the different theoretical worlds of global media
studies, takes a rare look at content, has a comparative
perspective, and moves beyond the conflict frame that has dominated
much of the literature in the field.
Screening Protest brings together a range of scholarly perspectives
on the study of protest mediations on television and in film.
Arguing that the screen is a fruitful, if overlooked, analytical
focus, the book explores how visual narratives of protest wander
across borders - territorial, temporal and generic. Chapters
compare coverage of major protests in recent history by global news
channels like Al Jazeera English, BBC World, CNN International and
RT. They consider how geopolitical agendas, newsroom culture and
the ubiquity of eyewitness footage shape the narration of events
such as the 'Umbrella Revolution' in Hong Kong, anti-austerity
protests in Greece, pro-EU mobilizations in the Ukraine and clashes
in Ferguson. A focus on narrative allows authors to compare such
news stories with popular cultural depictions of the protester, in
films and television series such as The Hunger Games, Robin Hood
and Suffragette. Although focussed on the screen, the scope of the
book is broad, given its exploration of images distributed
worldwide. Written with both scholars and students in mind,
Screening Protest will interest researchers in political science,
sociology, media and film studies, as well as the general reader
interested in current affairs.
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