The Paradox of Connection

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESSISBN: 9780252045615

How Digital Media Is Transforming Journalistic Labor

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By Diana Bossio, Valerie Belair-Gagnon, Avery E. Holton, Logan Molyneux
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
184

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Description

Diana Bossio is a senior lecturer in Media and Communication at Swinburne University and the author of Journalism and Social Media: Practitioners, Organisations, and Institutions. Valerie Belair-Gagnon is an associate professor and Cowles fellow in media management at the University of Minnesota and the author of Social Media at BBC News Reporting and coauthor of Journalism Research that Matters and Happiness in Journalism . Avery E. Holton is an associate professor and department chair in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah. Logan Molyneux is an associate professor of journalism at Temple University.

Acknowledgments Introduction Part I: Defining Connection and Disconnection in Journalism 1 Journalism and the Paradox of Connection 2 Burning Out, Turning Off, and Disconnection Part II: Connection and Disconnection in Organizational Contexts 3 Maintaining Professional Connections through Branding 4 Dis/connecting from Policy and Practice Part III: Connection and Disconnection for Changing Journalistic Practice 5 Connecting with Journalism in an Era of Misinformation 6 Harassment and Disconnection in Journalism's Digital Labor Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

"The Paradox of Connection shows strikingly how professional journalists negotiate with the promises and perils of the connected world and walk the line between personal branding, organizational pressures, and private life. The book provides a compelling snapshot of how journalists fine-tune their connectivity and offers tools for us all to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of living online. Social media tools have revolutionized journalism. Yet professional pressure to live online, online abuse and harassment, and increasingly precarious and unpaid labor have gone hand in hand with people in the trade mediating ever more complex forms of online communication."--Tero Karppi, author of Disconnect: Facebook's Affective Bonds

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