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El. knyga: Reporting War: Journalism in Wartime

3.83/5 (18 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (University of Pennsylvania, USA), Edited by (Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom)
  • Formatas: 384 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Jul-2004
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780203497562
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 384 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Jul-2004
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780203497562
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Reporting War explores the social responsibilities of the journalist during times of military conflict. News media treatments of international crises, especially the one underway in Iraq, are increasingly becoming the subject of public controversy, and discussion is urgently needed.

Each of this book's contributors challenges familiar assumptions about war reporting from a distinctive perspective. An array of pressing issues associated with conflicts over recent years are identified and critiqued, always with an eye to what they can tell us about improving journalism today.

Special attention is devoted to recent changes in journalistic forms and practices, and the ways in which they are shaping the visual culture of war, and issues discussed, amongst many, include:

  • the influence of censorship and propaganda
  • 'us' and 'them' news narratives
  • access to sources
  • '24/7 rolling news' and the 'CNN effect'
  • military jargon (such as 'friendly fire' and 'collateral damage')
  • 'embedded' and 'unilateral' reporters
  • tensions between objectivity and patriotism.

The book raises important questions about the very future of journalism during wartime, questions which demand public dialogue and debate, and is essential reading for students taking courses in news and news journalism, as well as for researchers, teachers and practitioners in the field.

List of contributors
viii
Introduction
Rules of engagement: journalism and war
3(20)
Stuart Allan
Barbie Zelizer
PART 1 War in the twenty-first century
23(90)
Understanding: the second casualty
25(18)
Oliver Boyd-Barrett
Information warfare in an age of hyper-militarism
43(16)
Richard Keeble
A moral imagination: the media's response to the war on terrorism
59(18)
Susan D. Moeller
The PR of terror: how new-style wars give voice to terrorists
77(19)
Tamar Liebes
Zohar Kampf
Researching US media--state relations and twenty-first century wars
96(17)
Piers Robinson
PART 2 Bearing witness
113(132)
When war is reduced to a photograph
115(21)
Barbie Zelizer
The Persian Gulf TV war revisited
136(19)
Douglas Kellner
Tribalism and tribulation: media constructions of ``African savagery'' and ``Western humanitarianism'' in the 1990s
155(19)
Susan L. Carruthers
Humanizing war: the Balkans and beyond
174(16)
Philip Hammond
Prisoners of news values?: journalists, professionalism, and identification in times of war
190(16)
Howard Tumber
Out of sight, out of mind?: the non-reporting of small wars and insurgencies
206(18)
Prasun Sonwalkar
The battlefield is the media: war reporting and the formation of national identity in Australia---from Belmont to Baghdad
224(21)
Michael Bromley
PART 3 Reporting the Iraq war
245(121)
Militarized journalism: framing dissent in the Gulf Wars
247(19)
Stephen D. Reese
War or peace?: legitimation, dissent, and rhetorical closure in press coverage of the Iraq war build-up
266(17)
Nick Couldry
John Downey
How British television news represented the case for the war in Iraq
283(18)
Justin Lewis
Rod Brookes
European news agencies and their sources in the Iraq war coverage
301(14)
Terhi Rantanen
Al-Jazeera and war coverage in Iraq: the media's quest for contextual objectivity
315(18)
Adel Iskandar
Mohammed El-Nawawy
Big media and little media: the journalistic informal sector during the invasion of Iraq
333(14)
Patricia Aufderheide
The culture of distance: online reporting of the Iraq war
347(19)
Stuart Allan
Index 366


Stuart Allan is a lecturer in the School of Cultural Studies at the University of the West of England. His books include News Culture (Open U 1999) and Media, Risk and Science. (Open U.P. 2002) He edits the series Issues in Cultural and Media Studies for Open U. P., now McGraw-Hill. He has co-edited a number of collections including News, Gender and Power (Routledge 1998), Environmental Risks and the Media (Routledge 2000) and Journalism after September 11 (with Barbie Zelizer) Routledge 2002.

Barbie Zelizer is the Raymond Williams Professor of Communication at the Annenberg School of Communication in Philadelphia. She is the author of several books on journalism, popular culture and coll-ective memory, and co-edited Journalism after September 11. She is a founder and co-editor of the Sage journal Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism.