|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Although journalism has always been an important vehicle of
collective memory, it has been neglected in discussions about how
memory works. This fascinating book aims to correct that
disjuncture, by tracking the ways in which journalism and shared
memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each
other. How is journalism's address to memory different from that of
other institutions? What would the study of memory look like
without journalism? And how would our understanding of journalism
fall short without paying attention to memory? Bringing together
leading scholars in journalism and memory studies, this collection
makes explicit the longstanding and complicated role that
journalism has played in keeping the past alive. From anniversary
issues and media retrospectives to simple verbal and visual
analogies connecting past and present, journalism incorporates an
address to earlier times across the wide array of its conventions
and practices. How it does so and which triumphs and problems ensue
in our understanding of collective memory constitute the charter of
this volume.
What Journalism Could Be asks readers to reimagine the news by
embracing a conceptual prism long championed by one of journalism's
leading contemporary scholars. A former reporter, media critic and
academic, Barbie Zelizer charts a singular journey through
journalism's complicated contours, prompting readers to rethink
both how the news works and why it matters. Zelizer tackles
longstanding givens in journalism's practice and study, offering
alternative cues for assessing its contemporary environment.
Highlighting journalism's intersection with interpretation,
culture, emotion, contingency, collective memory, crisis and
visuality, Zelizer brings new meaning to its engagement with events
like the global refugee crisis, rise of Islamic State, ascent of
digital media and twenty-first-century combat. Imagining what
journalism could be involves stretching beyond the already-known.
Zelizer enumerates journalism's considerable current challenges
while suggesting bold and creative ways of engaging with them. This
book powerfully demonstrates how and why journalism remains of
paramount importance.
Drawing on the collaborative expertise of three senior scholars,
The Journalism Manifesto makes a powerful case for why journalism
has become outdated and why it is in need of a long-overdue
transformation. Focusing on the relevance of elites, norms and
audiences, Zelizer, Boczkowski and Anderson reveal how these
previously integral components of journalism have become outdated:
Elites, the sources from which journalists draw much of their
information and around whom they orient their coverage, have become
dysfunctional; The relevance of norms, the cues by which
journalists do newswork, has eroded so fundamentally that
journalists are repeatedly entrenching themselves as negligible and
out of sync; and because audiences have shattered beyond
recognition, the correspondence between what journalists think of
as news and what audiences care about can no longer be assumed.
This authoritative manifesto argues that journalism has become
decoupled from the dynamics of everyday life in contemporary
society and outlines pathways for fixing this essential institution
of democracy. It is a must-read for students, scholars and
activists in the fields of journalism, media, policy, and political
communication.
Although journalism has always been an important vehicle of
collective memory, it has been neglected in discussions about how
memory works. This fascinating book aims to correct that
disjuncture, by tracking the ways in which journalism and shared
memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each
other. How is journalism's address to memory different from that of
other institutions? What would the study of memory look like
without journalism? And how would our understanding of journalism
fall short without paying attention to memory? Bringing together
leading scholars in journalism and memory studies, this collection
makes explicit the longstanding and complicated role that
journalism has played in keeping the past alive. From anniversary
issues and media retrospectives to simple verbal and visual
analogies connecting past and present, journalism incorporates an
address to earlier times across the wide array of its conventions
and practices. How it does so and which triumphs and problems ensue
in our understanding of collective memory constitute the charter of
this volume.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Dune: Part 1
Timothee Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, …
Blu-ray disc
(4)
R346
Discovery Miles 3 460
|