The SAGE Handbook of Digital Journalism

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTDISBN: 9781473906532

Price:
Sale price$390.00
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

Edited by Tamara Witschge, Chris W. Anderson, David Domingo, Alfred Hermida
Imprint:
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
624

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Rosalind Franklin Fellow and Associate Professor at the University of Groningen, Faculty of Arts since February 2012. Previously she worked at the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies, Cardiff University and at Goldsmiths Leverhulme Media Research Centre. Her research explores the ways in which technological, economic and social change is reconfiguring journalism, with a particular focus on what is called entrepreneurial journalism. She is co-author of the book 'Changing Journalism' (2011, Routledge). Associate Professor at the College of Staten Island (CUNY). He is the author of Rebuilding the News: Metropolitan Journalism in the Digital Age (Temple University Press) and the forthcoming Journalism: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford University Press) (with Len Downie and Michael Schudson) and Remaking the News (with Pablo Boczkowski) (MIT Press). He is currently at work on a historical and ethnographic manuscript tentatively titled Journalistic Cultures of Truth: Data in the Digital Age (Oxford) which examines the relationship between material evidence, computational processes, and notions of "context" from 1910 until the present Chair of Journalism at the Department of Information and Communication Sciences at Universite libre de Bruxelles (Belgium). Previously, he was visiting assistant professor at University of Iowa, visiting researcher at University of Tampere and senior lecturer at Universitat Rovira i Virgili. His research focuses on innovation processes in online communication, with a special interest in the (re)definition of journalistic practices and identities. He is coauthor of Participatory Journalism: guarding open gates at online newspapers (2011, Wiley-Blackwell) and co-editor of Making Online News (2008, 2011, Peter Lang). Director and Associate Professor at the School of Journalism at the University of British Columbia (Canada). An award-winning online news pioneer, digital media scholar, journalism educator, his research focuses on the reconfiguration of journalism, social media, and emerging forms of digital storytelling. He is the author of Tell Everyone: Why We Share and Why It Matters (2014, DoubleDay Canada) and coauthor of Participatory Journalism: Guarding Open Gates at Online Newspapers (2011, Wiley-Blackwell). A founding news editor of the BBC News website in 1997, he spent 16 years working as a BBC journalist, including four years as a correspondent in the Middle East.

Introduction - Editors PART I: CHANGING CONTEXTS 1. Digital Journalism and Democracy - Beate Ursula Josephi 2. Global Media Power - Owen Taylor 3. Digital News Media and Ethnic Minorities - Eugenia Siapera 4. The Business of News - Rasmus Kleis Nielsen 5. Digital Journalism Ethics - Stephen J.A. Ward 6. Social Media and the News - Alfred Hermida 7. Networked Framing and Gatekeeping - Sharon Meraz & Zizi Papacharissi 8. The Intimization of Journalism - Steen Steensen 9. Emotion and Journalism - Karin Wahl-Jorgensen PART II: NEWS PRACTICES IN THE DIGITAL ERA 10. Networked Journalism - Adrienne Russell 11. Hybrid News Practices - James F. Hamilton 12. The Ecology of Participation - Renee Barnes 13. Innovation in the Newsroom - Steve Paulussen 14. Outsourcing Newswork - Henrik OErnebring & Raul Ferrer 15. Semi-professional Amateurs - Jeremie Nicey 16. Sources as News Producers - Matt Carlson 17. Activists as News Producers - Yana Breindl 18. Citizen Witnesses - Stuart Allan 19. Hyperlocal News - Andy Williams & David Harte PART III: CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF JOURNALISM 20. Normative Models of Digital Journalism - Daniel Kreiss & J.S. Brennen 21. Mass, Audience, and the Public - Laura Ahva & Heikki Heikkilae 22. Digital Journalism as Practice - Bart Cammaerts & Nick Couldry 23. Mapping the Human-Machine Divide in Journalism - Seth C. Lewis & Oscar Westlund 24. Spaces and Places of News Consumption - Chris Peters 25. News Institutions - David M. Ryfe 26. Journalistic Fields - Tim P. Vos 27. News Networks - David Domingo & Victor Wiard 28. News Ecosystems - C.W. Anderson 29. Liquid Journalism - Anu Kantola PART IV: RESEARCH STRATEGIES 30. Ethnography of Digital News Production - Sue Robinson & Meredith Metzler 31. Adopting a 'material sensibility' in journalism studies - Juliette De Maeyer 32. Reconstructing production practices through interviewing - Zvi Reich & Aviv Barnoy 33. Sampling Liquid Journalism - Anders Olof Larsson, Helle Sjovaag, Michael Karlsson, Eirik Stavelin & Hallvard Moe 34. Big Data Analysis - Axel Bruns 35. Q-Method and News Audience Research - Kim Christian Schroder 36. Practicing audience-centred journalism research - Irene Costera Meijer 37. Multi-method Approaches - Wiebke Loosen & Jan-Hinrik Schmidt

Just like the news and newswork, journalism studies comes in increasingly varied forms and formats. Rather than trying to tame this tiger, the editors of this truly impressive Handbook succeed in setting scholars free - offering a glimpse of the many trees rather than focusing on the forest. The field will be so much better for it. -- Mark Deuze Here is a really useful book that helps us make sense of digital journalism in flux - how technology is disrupting the economy of traditional journalism, changing what 'doing journalism' means, redefining who gets to speak and listen, and yet leaving some things unchanged, all set within a wider conceptual framework that takes account of comparative difference and past theorising. -- James Curran This gloriously eclectic compendium embraces the "messiness" of the digital world while celebrating the diverse and continually evolving nature of journalism within it. The superb group of leading journalism studies scholars assembled here raise enough intriguing issues to keep our intellects happily engaged for a long time to come. -- Jane Singer,

You may also like

Recently viewed