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El. knyga: Discourse of News Values: How News Organizations Create Newsworthiness

4.33/5 (11 ratings by Goodreads)
(Senior Lecturer, The University of New South Wales), (Senior Lecturer, The University of Sydney)
  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190653965
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190653965
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The Discourse of News Values breaks new ground in multimodal news discourse, offering the first book-length treatment of the discursive analysis of news values and the construction of newsworthiness. The book explores how the news is "sold" (made newsworthy) to audiences through the semiotic resources of language and image, providing a new analytical framework which can be used by other researchers in their own subsequent studies. It combines in-depth theoretical discussion with analyses of authentic news discourse (both language and images) from around the English-speaking world, including three empirical case studies: one that analyzes news values around the topic of cycling across different English-speaking cultures; one that analyzes images disseminated by news media organizations via Facebook; and a third that focuses on the 100 "most shared" news items.

Recenzijos

Overall, this book breaks new ground and makes an original contribution to the field by offering (a) a new theoretical approach to the study of discursive construction of news values, (b) a comprehensive analytical framework for linguistic and visual analysis of news values, and (c) a range of corpus techniques and tools that can generate well-grounded findings. The approach and findings also bear pedagogical implications by informing the teaching and learning of journalistic semiotic practices. Hence, this well-organized and clearly written monograph is recommended for both emerging and established researchers who are engaged in discourse analysis, multimodal analysis, and corpus linguistics, as well as for journalism educators. * Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly *

List of tables
ix
List of figures
xi
Acknowledgements xv
1 Introduction
1(26)
1.1 The discourse of news values
1(3)
1.2 Why study news values?
4(2)
1.3 Key terms
6(2)
1.4 Corpus-assisted multimodal discourse analysis
8(14)
1.5 Summary and overview of chapters
22(5)
Part I THEORY
2 News values
27(22)
2.1 Journalism/communications studies
27(9)
2.2 Linguistics
36(3)
2.3 A new approach to news values
39(10)
3 Discursive news values analysis
49(28)
3.1 The discursive construction of news values
49(4)
3.2 Our list and labels
53(3)
3.3 Conceptualizing news values
56(11)
3.4 Context-dependency, preferred meaning, and the target audience
67(1)
3.5 Example analysis and concluding remarks
68(9)
Part II ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORKS
4 Language and news values
77(30)
4.1 Introduction
77(1)
4.2 Towards an inventory of linguistic resources
78(24)
4.3 Combining news values and example analysis
102(2)
4.4 Summary
104(3)
5 Visuals and news values
107(30)
5.1 Introduction
107(1)
5.2 The relationship between images and news values
108(2)
5.3 Visual resources in images
110(14)
5.4 Other semiotic resources constructing news values
124(3)
5.5 Front-page news: An example analysis
127(5)
5.6 Concluding remarks
132(5)
Part III EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
6 What is newsworthy about cyclists?
137(34)
6.1 Introduction
137(1)
6.2 The corpus
138(6)
6.3 Analysis of `typical' news values
144(7)
6.4 Analysis of news values around cyclists
151(13)
6.5 Summary and conclusion
164(7)
7 Images, news values, and Facebook
171(24)
7.1 Introduction
171(1)
7.2 Social media and news feeds
172(1)
7.3 Data and methodology
173(6)
7.4 Results
179(14)
7.5 Conclusion
193(2)
8 `All the news that's fit to share': News values in `most shared' news
195(34)
8.1 Introduction
195(2)
8.2 Data and methodology
197(6)
8.3 Verbal patterns
203(13)
8.4 Visual patterns
216(2)
8.5 Visual-verbal patterns
218(5)
8.6 Conclusion
223(6)
Part IV EXTENSIONS
9 Discursive news values analysis as an opportunity for diachronic and cross-cultural research
229(20)
9.1 Salacious Fiends and News from the Dead: Diachronic research
229(8)
9.2 El terror yihadista, Terroralarm, terrordramat: Cross-cultural research
237(9)
9.3 Concluding remarks
246(3)
10 Reflections
249(10)
10.1 From little things, big things grow (chapter 1)
249(1)
10.2 Surveying the field: It's a jungle out there (chapter 2)
250(1)
10.3 Situating our own approach to news values: Which corner of the jungle do we inhabit? (chapter 3)
250(2)
10.4 The discourse of news values (chapters 4 and 5)
252(1)
10.5 Case study 1: `Pedalling' a critical, topic-based approach to DNVA (chapter 6)
253(1)
10.6 Case study 2: DNVA and the digital disrupters of social media (chapter 7)
253(1)
10.7 Case study 3: Combining DNVA and CAMDA (chapter 8)
254(2)
10.8 Xinwen jiazhi, arzeshe khabari, Khabari Iqdaar (chapter 9)
256(1)
10.9 Concluding remarks
257(2)
Appendix 259(24)
References 283(16)
Index 299
Monika Bednarek is Associate Professor in Linguistics at the University of Sydney, Australia.

Helen Caple is an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Journalism at the University of New South Wales, Australia.