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El. knyga: Journalism After September 11

4.04/5 (26 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by , Edited by (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
  • Formatas: 368 pages
  • Serija: Communication and Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Apr-2011
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136739842
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 368 pages
  • Serija: Communication and Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Apr-2011
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136739842
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

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Praise for the first edition:

This collection of essays comes mainly from academics but nobody should bridle at theorists lecturing practitioners. They properly challenge the way September 11th was reported - in a way that's both an endorsement of the role of the media and a wake-up call on its failures . . . anyone interested in our trade should read it.'
- Roger Mosey, Ariel

'A thoughtful and engaging examination of the effects of 9/11 on the field of journalism. Its unique aim is to discuss the impact of the attack as a personal trauma and its current and future effects on journalism and the reporting of the news. . . highly recommended.' - Library Journal

Journalism After September 11 examines how the traumatic attacks of that day continue to transform the nature of journalism, particularly in the United States and Britain. Familiar notions of what it means to be a journalist, how best to practice journalism, and what the public can reasonably expect of journalists in the name of democracy, were shaken to their foundations.

Ten years on, however, new questions arise regarding the lasting implications of that tragic day and its aftermath.

Bringing together an internationally respected collection of scholars and media commentators, Journalism After September 11 addresses topics such as: journalism and public life at a time of crisis; broadsheet and tabloid newspaper coverage of the attacks; the role of sources in shaping the news; reporting by global news media such as CNN; Western representations of Islam; current affairs broadcasting; news photography and trauma; the emotional well-being of reporters; online journalism; as well as a host of pertinent issues around news, democracy and citizenship.

This second edition includes four new chapters – examining Arabic newspaper reporting of the attacks, the perceptions of television audiences, national magazine coverage of the ensuing crisis, and the media politics of ‘othering’ – as well as revised chapters from the first edition and an updated Introduction by the co-editors. A foreword is provided by Victor Navasky and an afterword by Phillip Knightley.

Recenzijos

Praise for the first edition:

This collection of essays comes mainly from academics but nobody should bridle at theorists lecturing practitioners. They properly challenge the way September 11th was reported - in a way that's both an endorsement of the role of the media and a wake-up call on its failures . . . anyone interested in our trade should read it.' - Roger Mosey, Ariel

'A thoughtful and engaging examination of the effects of 9/11 on the field of journalism. Its unique aim is to discuss the impact of the attack as a personal trauma and its current and future effects on journalism and the reporting of the news. . . highly recommended.' - Library Journal

List of contributors
xiv
Foreword xix
Victor Navasky
Introduction: when trauma shapes the news 1(32)
Barbie Zelizer
Stuart Allan
PART I The trauma of September 11
33(50)
1 September 11 in the mind of American journalism
35(9)
Jay Rosen
2 What's unusual about covering politics as usual
44(11)
Michael Schudson
3 Photography, journalism, and trauma
55(20)
Barbie Zelizer
4 Mediating catastrophe: September 11 and the crisis of the other
75(8)
Roger Silverstone
PART II News and its contexts
83(84)
5 American journalism on, before, and after September 11
85(19)
James W. Carey
6 September 11 and the structural limitations of US journalism
104(9)
Robert W. McChesney
7 "Our duty to history": newsmagazines and the national voice
113(18)
Carolyn Kitch
8 Covering Muslims: journalism as cultural practice
131(16)
Karim H. Karim
9 "Why do they hate us?": seeking answers in the pan-Arab news coverage of 9/11
147(20)
Noha Mellor
PART III The changing boundaries of journalism
167(104)
10 Reweaving the Internet: online news of September 11
169(22)
Stuart Allan
11 Converging into irrelevance?: supermarket tabloids in the post-9/11 world
191(21)
S. Elizabeth Bird
12 Media fundamentalism: the immediate response of the UK national press to terrorism---from 9/11 to 7/7
212(20)
Michael Bromley
Stephen Cushion
13 Television agora and agoraphobia post-September 11
232(20)
Simon Cottle
14 "Our ground zeros": diaspora, media, and memory
252(19)
Marie Gillespie
PART IV Reporting trauma tomorrow
271(64)
15 Journalism, risk, and patriotism
273(19)
Silvio Waisbord
16 Trauma talk: reconfiguring the inside and outside
292(16)
Annabelle Srebenyy
17 Journalism and political crises in the global network society
308(11)
Ingrid Volkmer
18 Reporting under fire: the physical safety and emotional welfare of journalists
319(16)
Howard Tumber
Afterword 335(2)
Phillip Knightley
Index 337
Barbie Zelizer is Professor of Communication and holds the Raymond Williams Chair of Communication at the Annenberg School of Communication, University of Pennsylvania. Stuart Allan is Professor of Journalism in the Media School, Bournemouth University.