Full Description
Modern technology has enabled anyone with a digital camera or cell phone to capture images of newsworthy events as they develop, and news organizations around the world increasingly depend on these amateur images for their coverage of unfolding events. However, with globalization facilitating wider circulation, critics have expressed strong concern over exactitude and objectivity. The first book on this topic, Amateur Images and Global News considers at length the ethical and professional issues that arise with the use of amateur images in the mainstream news media—as well as their role in producing knowledge and framing meanings of disasters in global and national contexts.
Contents
Introduction - Kari Andén-Papadopoulos and Mervi Pantti
PART I: HISTORIES
Chapter 1: Looking Back: Ethics and Aesthetics of Non-Professional Photography - Karin Becker
Chapter 2: Amateur Photography in Wartime: Early Histories - Stuart Allan
Chapter 3: The Eyewitness in the Age of Digital Transformation - Mette Mortensen
PART II: PRACTICES
Chapter 4: Amateur Images and Journalistic Authority - Helle Sjøvaag
Chapter 5: Transparency and Trustworthiness: Strategies for Incorporating Amateur Photography into News Discourse - Mervi Pantti and Kari Andén-Papadopoulos
Chapter 6: Pans and Zooms: The Quality of Amateur Video Covering a Breaking News Story - Ray Niekamp
Chapter 7: 'You Will Die Next': Killer Images and the Circulation of Moral Hierarchy - Johanna Sumiala
Chapter 8: From Columbine to Kauhajoki: Amateur Videos as Acts of Terror - Marguerite Moritz
PART III: CIRCULATIONS
Chapter 9: Visual Blowback: Soldier Photography and the War in Iraq - Liam Kennedy
Chapter 10: In Amateurs We Trust: Readers Assessing Non-Professional News Photographs - Liina Puustinen and Janne Seppänen
Chapter 11: 'More Real and Less Packaged': Audience Discourses on Amateur News Content and Their Effects on Journalism Practice - Andy Williams, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen and Claire Wardle