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E-raamat: Slow Journalism

Edited by (University of Sydney, Australia)
  • Formaat: 300 pages
  • Sari: Journalism Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429891625
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  • Formaat: 300 pages
  • Sari: Journalism Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429891625
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Slow Journalism has emerged in recent years to enact a critique of the limitations and dangers of the speed of much mainstream contemporary journalistic practice. There have been types of journalism produced and consumed slowly for centuries, of course. What is new is the context of hyper-acceleration and over-production of journalism, where quality has suffered, ethics are compromised and user attention has eroded. Many have been asking if there is another way to practice journalism. The emergence of Slow Journalism suggests that there is.Many international scholars and practitioners have been thinking critically about the problems wrought by speed, and are utilising the concept of slow to describe a new way of thinking about and producing journalism. This edited collection offers theoretical perspectives and case studies on the practice of slow journalism around the globe. Slow Journalism is a new practice for new times. This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Practice and Digital Journalism.
Citation Information vii
Notes on Contributors x
Introduction: Slow journalism: An introduction to a new research paradigm 1(9)
Megan Le Masurier
1 On not going too fast with slow journalism
10(13)
Erik Neveu
2 Reclaiming slowness in journalism: Critique, complexity and difference
23(15)
Geoffrey Craig
3 Lessening the construction of otherness: A slow ethics of journalism
38(16)
Helene Maree Thomas
4 The temporal tipping point: Regimentation, representation and reorientation in ethnographic journalism
54(15)
Anne Kirstine Hermann
5 When slow news is good news: Book-length journalism's role in extending and enlarging daily news
69(14)
Matthew Ricketson
6 Slow journalism in Spain: New magazine startups and the paradigmatic case of Jot Down
83(18)
Alejandro Barranquero Carretero
Garbihe Jaurrieta Bariain
7 Is there a future for slow journalism? The perspective of younger users
101(16)
Nico Drok
Liesbeth Hermans
8 Editing, fast and slow
117(13)
Susan L. Greenberg
9 Networked news time: How slow--or fast--do publics need news to be?
130(18)
Mike Ananny
10 Multimedia, slow journalism as process, and the possibility of proper time
148(13)
Benjamin Ball
11 The Sochi Project: Slow journalism within the transmedia space
161(17)
Renira Rampazzo Gambarato
12 Slowing down media coverage on the US-Mexico border: News as sociological critique in Borderland
178(16)
Stuart Davis
13 Resiliency in Recovery: Slow journalism as public accountability in post-Katrina New Orleans
194(16)
Jan Lauren Boyles
14 Time to engage: De Correspondent's redefinition of journalistic quality
210(18)
Frank Harbers
15 "Make every frame count": The practice of slow photojournalism and the work of David Burnett
228(18)
Andrew L. Mendelson
Brian Creech
16 The business of slow journalism: Deep storytelling's alternative economies
246(17)
David Dowling
17 Slow journalism and the Out of Eden Walk
263(16)
Don Belt
Jeff South
Index 279
Megan Le Masurier is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Media and Communications, University of Sydney, Australia.