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[Commlist] call for chapters - Routledge Companion to TV News
Mon Dec 17 13:17:21 GMT 2018
*CALL FOR CHAPTERS FOR BOOK ON TV NEWS MAKING:*
Calling all researchers of TV news making! Chapters are invited for the
new Routledge Companion to TV News – an edited volume aiming to collate
recent research of the making of TV news.
Deadline for submitting your chapter is Thursday the 10^th of January.
Submissions should be no more than 200-250 words. Submit your chapter
idea to Line Hassall Thomsen at: (LHT /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(LHT /at/ cc.au.dk)>.
The book is under contract with Routledge, to be published end of 2019
in the Routledge Companions series -
https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Companions/book-series/ROUTCOMPS
The book is edited by Line Hassall Thomsen (Aarhus University, Denmark.
At a time where TV news is struggling and changing like never before,
this book will take readers through an impressive range of essays on the
current state and practices of TV news making today. The Routledge
Companion to TV News Making aims to be a seminal reference source for
the rapidly changing field of TV news. This book aims to bring a
multi-facetted perspective to current debates on TV news and news making
today. It is the hope that this companion will bring a new perspective
to the field of TV news studies, mixing the everyday reality of TV news
work with analysis from a varied range of academic disciplines. This
approach will be shaped by new analysis from international writers of
multiple disciplines welcoming theories from both politics, media
studies, communications, sociology and anthropology.
*BOOK THEMES*:
We are very much looking forward to your submission. Possible themes
could suit, but are not limited to these following themes:
*PART I: THE HISTORY OF TV NEWS*
This section will cover both the history of broadcasting, the history of
public service broadcasting. Discussions will include how broadcasters
once enjoyed a monopoly on news, much different to today when news is
available on a plethora of broadcasters, media and platforms.
*PART II: DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO STUDYING THE MAKING OF TV NEWS*
This section will introduce a range of different approaches to studying
TV news making.
*PART III: CENTRAL ISSUES*
This section gives an insight into some of the most central issues in
the study of TV news making today. Concepts of democracy and the public
sphere will be central categories of analysis.**
**
*PART IV: **EMERGING TRENDS*
Among others, this section will introduce some of the main discussions
on multiskilling journalism and the use of social media for broadcast
news today. The section will also devote space to focus on how
journalists perceive current changes and how this influences workflows.
*PART V: TV NEWS-MAKING AROUND THE WORLD *
This section will provide a global perspective to current debate of TV
news making. As may be shown, TV news still plays a crucial part in
nation building, democracy and local governance around the world.
*PART VI: DISCUSSIONS ON THE FUTURE OF TV NEWS *
So, will TV news survive? Is this a time of apocalypse or opportunity
for Broadcast news? No doubt the role of TV news is rapidly changing.
Where will TV news making be in ten years? And what exactly will the
Internet and the increased demand for using social media mean to TV
news? This section will attempt at answering some of these, and many
more questions facing TV journalism makers and TV news researchers today.
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