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Full Description
This book brings together the work of British, American and Australian scholars and practitioners in a substantially new edition of this popular collection. It examines the practices of reportage in an era of social networking and online news, an age of altered audience expectations in which the biggest tabloid scandal is the conduct of the tabloid press itself. It debates notions of subjectivity and objectivity in journalism today, explores how new technologies have mobilized professional and aspiring journalists alike, examines the practices and impacts of citizen journalism and user-generated content, investigates the political and cultural value of populist news and interrogates how radical ongoing developments in political, economic, professional, institutional and technological conditions are continuing to change the nature of the news industry in the second decade of the twenty-first century.
Contents
ContentsInternet - Ivor Gaber: Three Cheers for Subjectivity: The Continuing Collapse of the Seven Pillars of Journalistic Wisdom - Andrew Calcutt/Philip Hammond: Objectivity, Objectification and the End of Journalism - David Cameron: Mobile Journalism: A Snapshot of Ongoing Research and Practice - Richard Junger: An Alternative to Fortress Journalism: Historical Precedents for Citizen Journalism and Crowdsourcing in the United States - Jon Silverman: YouTube If You Want To: Camera Phones, Investigative Journalism and Social Control - Gavin Stewart: I cant belive a war started and Wikipedia sleeps: News by Online Encyclopaedia - James Morrison: Armchair Auditing and the Great Town Hall Transparency Swindle - David McQueen: Between a Rock and a Hard Place - the Uncertain Future of Current Affairs - Mick Temple: A Forum for Fruitcakes and Fascists: The Saviour of Mainstream Journalism - Alec Charles: The Paper Menagerie: Making Sense of Soft News.



