Full Description
Explores the multifaceted dynamics of media change across technologies and societies
Media change is constant, but it is rarely straightforward. While some shifts in the media landscape are rapid and transformative, others unfold slowly, unevenly, or even stall and reverse. Media Change: Contemporary Cases, Consequences, and Conceptualizations examines this complexity through a series of contemporary, self-contained case studies. Each of the nine core chapters explores a specific example of media transformation, such as AI-driven content production, evolving regulatory landscapes, and media business models. Situating media change within broader historical and conceptual frameworks, Neil Thurman reveals how today's most pressing issues in media are part of longer trajectories of change, shaped by forces such as technological innovation, economic pressures, and cultural resistance.
Drawing on an original "6 Rs" framework—revolution, remediation, resistance, rapidity, regulation, and reversals—Thurman provides a systematic yet accessible way of thinking about how and why media change occurs. By combining rich empirical evidence with a long historical view, the book illuminates the social, industrial, and technological drivers of transformation and their impact on media practices, products, and audiences. Its nine case studies not only offer depth on contemporary issues, but also prompt reflection on broader patterns of continuity and disruption in media systems.
Offering fresh insights into contemporary communication, Media Change:
Balances global perspectives, drawing on both US and non-US examples
Challenges common assumptions about the evolving media environment
Demonstrates how change can be incomplete, uneven, and historically contingent
Includes discussion questions at the end of each chapter to stimulate critical reflection
Combines conceptual innovation with extensive empirical evidence
Written in a clear and accessible style, Media Change: Contemporary Cases, Consequences, and Conceptualizations is an essential resource for those seeking to understand how media systems are transforming. Whether used in its entirety or as stand-alone chapters, it is ideal for undergraduate, master's, and doctoral students in media, communication, journalism, and cultural studies programs.
This broad-ranging book by a true leader in the field illuminates key dynamics in media transformation in recent years: drawing on a set of well-chosen case studies, it identifies the major social, industrial, and technological drivers of change, and explains them through its innovative '6 Rs' framework. Using that framework, Thurman prompts us to ask all the right questions—not just about his illustrative cases, but about media change more generally too. A true tour de force at this critical moment for media production, policy, and use around the world.
— Axel Bruns, Australian Laureate Fellow and Professor, Digital Media Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology Australia
Drawing on nine original case studies, Thurman develops an innovative framework for understanding media change. The book brilliantly captures media change's complex historical dependencies, sometimes slow unfolding, regular reversals, and how it can—and at times should—be resisted.
— Thorsten Quandt, Professor and Dean of the Department Educational Science and Social Sciences, University of Münster, Germany
At a time when the evolution and operation of our increasingly complex media ecosystem is of growing political, economic, and cultural consequence, Neil Thurman's book provides valuable guidance through the process of media change for students, scholars, and professionals.
— Philip M. Napoli, James R. Shepley Professor of Public Policy; Director, DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy, Duke University, USA
Media Change is a refreshing take on contemporary transformations in our media environment. Thurman's 6 R's framework of media change (Revolution, Remediation, Resistance, Rapidity, Regulation, and Reversals) is definitely here to stay.
— Thomas Hanitzsch, Professor of Communication, Department of Media and Communication, LMU Munich, Germany and President, International Communication Association, Germany
Media Change grapples with the enormous changes that have affected media ecosystems in the past 5 decades and adeptly reveals why they are important and how readers should understand them. Professor Thurman explains how and why the changes have upended industries and companies and left policymakers scrambling to address new and complex media effects and issues. Although based in how the media ecosystems have evolved, the book presents insights on and the contemporary relevance of those changes, and how current scholars and practitioners should conceptualize and respond as changes continue in media environments.
— Robert G. Picard, University of Oxford, UK
Neil Thurman's Media Change provides a most valuable analysis to understand contemporary dynamics of media transformation and to anticipate some of the most likely future pathways. An important read for scholars and practitioners alike.
— Pablo J. Boczkowski, Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor, Department of Communication studies, Northwestern University, UK
This strikingly original, engaging and accessible book is essential reading for anyone seeking to make sense of changes in our media landscape. The book's richly detailed exploration of varied case studies— from live blogs to AI and internet pornography— sheds light on why and how transformations take place. In doing so, it challenges technologically determinist accounts, reminding us of the complexity of change.
—Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Professor and University Dean of Research Environment and Culture, Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Culture, Cardiff University
Media Change is an engaging and enlightening journey through decades of digital transformation, from the early days of blogging to generative AI. Written in a clear, accessible style, Thurman tracks how media evolution rarely follows a linear path, instead unfolding in unpredictable patterns. The book shows how understanding media transformation demands looking beyond technological innovation and recognising the roles played by remediation, regulation, and resistance.
— Alfred Hermida, Professor, School of Journalism, Writing, and Media, The University of British Columbia, Canada
Contents
Acknowledgements
Part 1: Concepts
1. Introduction: Media, Change, and Common Themes
2. Modelling the Life Cycle of Media Evolution
Part 2: Cases
3. Media Change Through Media Convergence: The Case of Live Blogs
4. Television: Changes in How and Why we Watch
5. The Changing Regulation of Online Content: The Case of Internet Pornography
6. Changes in Charging for Online News
7. Changes in Media Audience Measurement
8. The Changing Conveyance of Content: When Media Brands Go Online-only
9. Changing Media Content Creation Through Automation and AI
10. Changes in Newsgathering
11. Changes in Media Distribution: Personalization and News
Part 3: Conclusions
12. The 6 Rs Framework: Media Change as Eventual and Exceptional Evolution
Notes
Index



