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[Commlist] Call for a Special Issue of ‘JournalismStudies’: Rethinking the Sociology of News
Thu Nov 04 16:01:21 GMT 2021
*Call for a Special Issue of ‘Journalism Studies’: **Rethinking the
Sociology of News: Global, Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives*
**
*Special Issue Editors:*
Hayes Mabweazara, University of Glasgow - (Hayes.Mabweazara /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)
Catherine Happer, University of Glasgow - (catherine.happer /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)
*Manuscript deadline*:
1 May 2022
*Rationale and scope:*
Journalism studies is defined by and benefits from its interdisciplinary
nature and broad scope of interests and priorities. However, one
consequence of this is that the way in which distinct disciplines might
differentially shape and bring value to our understanding of the field
can be overlooked. A key strand of the current foundational critique of
journalism was established and deeply rooted in the discipline of
Sociology, which gave rise to specific concerns and approaches to
understanding the ways in which news organisations manage the processes
through which information is gathered and transformed into news and the
pressures that encourage journalists to follow familiar patterns of news
making. In the British context, the late 20^th century was a
particularly prolific period for the sociology of news in which the
empiricism of institutional research centres such as the Glasgow
University Media Group (GUMG) played a leading role in setting the
agenda for journalism and media studies. The conceptual basis for such
work was the understanding of journalism as embedded within systems of
power (economic, political, social, cultural) and as institutionalised
through everyday practices, shared beliefs, and norms. Methodological
approaches which involved the analysis of production processes, patterns
in content, audience reception and the formation of public opinion
addressed the totality of communication systems with journalism and
journalists as key agents in driving a range of societal outcomes.
The body of work produced by the GUMG in particular was influenced by
the political economy of the media as represented, for example, by
Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model, ideas of media as cultural
hegemony and the role of ‘primary definers’ in the work of Stuart Hall.
Shared foci around journalistic selection, inclusion, and omission
paralleled work in the US, including McCombs and Shaw’s research on
‘agenda setting,’ Robert Entman’s ‘media framing’ and David Manning
White’s seminal ‘gatekeeper theory,’ among others. The importance of
structures of ownership and control and the extent to which the broader
ideological climate shapes the thinking of journalists also came to the
fore. News production was also seen as a highly regulated and routine
process shaped by organisational pressures, with very little
acknowledgment of journalistic agency. For some time, this pioneering
body of work collectively ushered in revolutionary approaches to
understanding news as a historically contingent ‘manufactured’ product.
However, the complexities of contemporary societies and their media
systems have increasingly rendered these early sociological approaches
anachronistic, and in some cases, inadequate as explanatory frameworks
for understanding the operations of journalism in the 21^st century.
The systems of power or ideological climate of news production have
changed significantly and the field of analysis has expanded beyond a
focus on the production of information flows and their impacts within
Western economies. New political and social formations, including the
complexities of increased globalisation and the emergence of
multicultural citizenship have become central concerns in changing
social and political contexts in which new global news players are
emerging. At the heart of these changes are developments in digital
technologies which have radically transformed the working practices of
journalists and news consumption habits. The time is long overdue for
revisiting early sociological studies and their deep-rooted
Western-centrism which continue to define journalism studies’ key areas
of inquiry and the field’s theoretical and methodological direction
globally.
This special issue addresses the question of the continuing value of the
priorities of the sociology of news and the importance of a sociological
critique of journalism more generally, the dynamism and adaptability of
its modes of analysis to different contexts, and the validity of the
conceptualisations of power and resistance built into them. Themes and
areas of particular interest may include:
* Emerging methodological approaches to studying news and news
organisations
* Doing content analysis beyond mass media
* Conceptualising ‘media power’ in the age of big tech
* Constructing ‘public opinion’ through social media content production
* Agenda setting on social media platforms
* News values in non-Western contexts
* The impact of technological innovation on traditional sociological
understandings of news production
* Studies that challenge and throw into question Anglo-American
conceptions of news
* Changing connections between journalists and news sources
* Shifts in the culture and patterns of news consumption/reception
* The shifting nature of social class identifications and media audiences
* Contestable notions of bias and objectivity in the news media
*Submission Instructions:*
* Select 'Rethinking the Sociology of News: Global, Empirical and
Theoretical Perspectives' when submitting your paper to ScholarOne.
* Full paper submissions only: 1 May 2022.
* All submissions will undergo the normal peer-review process.
* We will consider theoretical papers, case studies and those which
contain original research.
* Anticipated publication date: early 2023.
* *Please note that there are no Article Processing Charges associated
with this CfPs.*
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