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[ecrea] VIII International Conference Latina de Comunicación Social
Mon May 02 22:09:08 GMT 2016
*We are pleased to invite you to the **Panel Session based on the
Journalistic Cultures Studies in the **VIII International Conference
Latina de Comunicación Social, December 2, 5, 7 and 9, 2016**, **La
Laguna (Tenerife), Spain*
* Panel Session: “Journalistic Cultures Studies”*
**
*Chair and discussant: Martín Oller Alonso*
*Co/Chair and discussant: Carlos Arcila and Palmira Chavero*
**
**
*Thematic Axes of the Panel*
Its diversity is manifest from individual perceptions that journalists
have about some of the main dimensions studied in the analysis of the
Journalistic cultures around the world:
Comparative studies in journalism
Professional role of journalists
Objectivity as an ideal and as a method within the media
Ethical guidelines
Professional autonomy (self / censorship)
Trust and credibility in institutions and in journalism
Contextual influences
Access to information of journalists (sources)
Changes in journalism today
Journalism /online/ / /offline/
Technology and media
Journalistic routines
Risks of journalists and media
Relationship between journalists, media and powers
**
*Journalistic Cultures*
The researchers of this project intend to analyse and define the
journalistic cultures of different countries around the globe. We
understand journalistic culture as a specific cognition of journalists
about journalism. Within this, they evaluate their cultural ideas and
orders, through which they create their reality, thus shaping their
professional actions within the collective knowledge (Hanitzsch, 2007: 373).
Given that journalists’ professional work is rooted in a culture and in
common ways and attitudes which, in turn, is included in a set of
guidelines and general cultural practices. The identity of journalists
has been at the centre of research on journalistic culture and, for this
reason, the links between the journalist, journalistic culture and
cultural context must be studied. As stated Esser (2004: 155), different
cultures cannot be understood as communities of homogeneous values.
Rather they are hybrids that involve national traditional elements
linked to other international elements, interacting with each other
dynamically
Throughout the last century, it has been taken as reference Western
journalistic culture, acting at all times as a model and even imitate.
However, through this project, we present the contextualization of the
journalistic culture of Ecuador, since the information currently
practice varies from place to place, determined by the different social,
political, cultural and economic environments. The multiplicity, or
multipolaridad- journalism, has led us to study the so-called
“intermediate journalistic cultures”, defined by having distinctive
features of the “Western journalistic culture”. Today, more than ever,
these fragmented cultures pigmented and develop the monochrome static
concept based on the standardization of all international journalistic
features.
*Intermediate journalistic cultures*
From the concept suggested by Bourdieu1 (1984: 359) of “cultural
intermediaries” and from the standpoint of Zelizer (2004: 52) speaks of
journalists as an “interpretive community” based on subjective
selection, we can reach a reconceptualization of the role of the media
and journalists in countries where the journalistic culture differs from
the concept of Western journalistic culture. Bourdieu (1984: 99-114),
through his theory of social fields mentioned in the 2nd chapter in The
social space and Its transformations of his book Distinction: A Social
Critique of the Judgment of Taste 1984, defines journalistic limits as a
profession and how these intersect with other professional fields such
as politics and economy. So, from the standpoint of Bourdieu (1984) and
Zelizer (2004), we note that journalism in the countries in developing
and with undemocratic political regimes can also create a particular
media community and features that share a common set of rules.
Thus, we managed to establish a specific field of work with which to
unravel the different professional identities in modern journalistic
culture of these countries, defined from the concept of presentation and
representation given by Bourdieu (1984).Why Zelizer (2007: 25) states
that journalism is shown as an interpretative social field of the
community in which it is located, with its 1 “We cannot raise the
cultural practices within that culture, strictly and ordinary sense, is
associated with the culture in the anthropological sense.” A 20 own
rules and speeches. A circumstance that makes journalism appears in a
situation of constant negotiation and relativism with respect to
different cultural perspectives. I argued so far leads us to consider
three key points in the processing and analysis of journalists as part
of the social media field: 1) the definition of journalists as such in
their societies and in their academic studies; 2) possible definitions
of journalism in these intermediate cultures, and 3) the problematic
location of a unified and homogeneous organization due to media
decentralization. In conclusion we note that to understand the
intermediate journalistic cultures- which differ from the standardized
concept of Western journalistic culture-, it is necessary: 1º. Define
journalists as symbolic producers, able to conceptualize, build and
convey the meanings of cultural forms; but also to articulate and
disseminate ideologies that identify a nation. 2º underscore the
symbolic importance of these managers because these countries
(postcolonial, on process of development or under undemocratic regimes)
are the major producers of strategic meanings ordering reality (Mahon,
2000).
Although sometimes, as it has been mentioned as ratifies Zelizer (2007:
21), often it takes Western journalistic culture (dominated by the
Anglo-American variant) as an example or as standard, currently there
are numerous distinctive journalistic practices along worldwide,
determined by the contexts in which they are located, as well as for its
social features, political, economic and cultural. Today, there are
common and distinguishing features that define the various forms of
practicing journalism worldwide. These singularities are what lead us to
try to clarify the distinctive and common features of journalistic
culture in different regions of the globe.
*Comparative perspective in the analysis of journalism*
Media culture has been explicitly theorised as a unit for comparative
research (Hepp & Couldry, 2012) because it helps to broaden the
perspective and to address a range of questions that cannot be answered
in the context of single-country studies (Voltmer, 2008).
Comparative research in communication and media studies is
conventionally understood as contrasting different macro-level cases
(e.g., world regions, countries, subnational regions, social milieux,
language areas, cultural thickenings) at one or more points in time.
[...] [It] differs from non-comparative work, since it attempts to reach
conclusions beyond single cases and explains differences and
similarities between objects of analysis against the backdrop of their
contextual conditions (Esser, 2013: 115).
For these reasons, comparative media and journalistic culture researches
have gained relevance in recent years (Esser & Hanitzsch, 2012). “This
growing number of comparative studies indicates that journalism and
journalism research no longer operate within national or cultural
boundaries” (Weaver & Löffelholz, 2008: 8).
This study contrasts the universal Continental European model of Hallin
& Mancini (2004), that analyses the highly politicised and literary
style of the southern European journalistic model (Spain), and the
moderately politicised, corporatist style of central European journalism
(Switzerland) (Hallin & Mancini, 2004; Mancini, 2005; Esser & Umbricht,
2013) with the model of intermediate journalistic cultures (Oller &
Barredo, 2013) of Ecuador. Hence, the model of Hallin and Mancini is
criticised, since the discussion is centred on the applicability of this
model to other parts of the world (Albaek et al., 2014). In the case of
Ecuador, its contextual conditions and “[...] national historiographies
of socialist mass cultures […] are a necessary first step for
cross-national comparative research” (Perusko & Cuvalo, 2014: 137).
*Important Deadlines*
– *From March 7 to November 7*, 2016: submission of the proposal in the
form of an abstract of maximum 1 page (the proposal must include some
recent references).
– November 7, 2016: acceptance of the proposal (authors will be notified
in the shortest possible time about the acceptation of their papers).
– November 14, 2016: full paper submission.
– November 21, 2016: full paper acceptance.
Papers can be submitted in English, Spanish or Portuguese. The abstracts
should be in English or Spanish followed by 5 keywords. Please provide
the full names, affiliations, and e-mail addresses of all authors,
indicating the contact author.
Papers, and any queries, should be sent to: (martin.olleralonso /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(martin.olleralonso /at/ gmail.com)>; (pchavero /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(pchavero /at/ gmail.com)>; (carcila /at/ usal.es) <mailto:(carcila /at/ usal.es)>
Authors of the accepted papers will be notified by e-mail.
*Website*
http://www.revistalatinacs.org/16SLCS/2016_convocatoria_8_congreso.html
For any further information please contact with Dr. Martín Oller Alonso
((martin.olleralonso /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(martin.olleralonso /at/ gmail.com)>),
Professor of University of Americas; Professor of the Master in
Journalism of the Faculty of Journalism at the University of La Habana;
Executive Committee Member Worlds of Journalism Study (WJS); Coordinator
for Latin America and Ecuador (http://www.worldsofjournalism.org/);
Journalistic Role Performance around the World Project Member
(http://www.journalisticperformance.org/); Chair of the /Culturas
Periodísticas/ Project (http://culturasperiodisticas.com/)
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