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[ecrea] New Book: Contemporary Journalism in the US and Germany: Agents of Accountability
Tue Mar 21 11:34:36 GMT 2017
New book announcement:
Contemporary Journalism in the US and Germany: Agents of Accountability
by Matthias Revers (University of Frankfurt)
Palgrave Macmillan US (2017)
http://link.springer.com/book/10.1057%2F978-1-137-51537-7
This book challenges the idea that Western media systems are becoming
more American in the digital age, arguing that journalistic cultures are
not only significantly different from each other still but also variably
open and resistant to change. Drawing upon extensive field research of
political reporters and examination of discourses of journalistic
professionalism as well institutional analysis, this book finds that
occupational norms and values of journalism in the US are vigorously
upheld but in fact relatively porous and malleable. In Germany, by
contrast, professional boundaries are rather strong and resilient but
treated matter-of-factly. Revers argues that this is both a consequence
of institutional arrangements of media systems and historically evolved
cultural principles of journalism in both countries which mutually
constitute each other.
“Matthias Revers has written a terrific cross-national ethnographic
study of political news reporting in two leading democracies. He draws
out the similarities and differences between Germany and the United
States with compelling observations and quotes, and he explains his
findings with a sophisticated blend of cultural sociology and field
theory. Revers is sometimes critical, but never cynical: one comes away
from this book with a renewed appreciation of how much civic values
still matter for journalists, in profound and meaningful ways that
affect all of us.”
– Rodney Benson, Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication, New
York University, USA, and author of “Shaping Immigration News”
“This is first-rate scholarship. Cross-national studies of the news
media are unusual; those based on ethnographic research are rare indeed.
This rich, well-conceived, and deeply thoughtful work illuminates both
German and American journalistic values and practices. It’s a treasure!”
– Michael Schudson, Professor of Journalism and Adjunct Professor of
Sociology, Columbia University, USA
“No one is foolish enough to think of news media as a transparent window
into political action, but few consider the national differences in how
the work that journalists do to construct mediated realities for their
readers. This study of local political reporting in Albany and Munich
unpacks German and American reporters’ beliefs about professionalism,
objectivity and fairness to explain significant differences in how they
walk the line between facts and opinion.”
– Myra Marx Ferree, Alice H. Cook Professor of Sociology, University of
Wisconsin, USA, and co-author of “Shaping Abortion Discourse”
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Textures and Porosities of Journalistic Fields
Chapter 2: Contextualizing US and German Journalism
Chapter 3: The Sacred Discourse of Journalistic Professionalism
Chapter 4: Staking Out the Boundaries of Professionalism: Good and Bad
Journalism
Chapter 5: Competitive Collegiality: The Press Corps Environment
Chapter 6: Embedded Political Reporting: Boundary Processes and Performances
Chapter 7: Digital Media and the Diversification of Professionalism
Chapter 8: Conclusion: Occupational Cultures and Journalistic Fields in
Germany and the USA
Appendix: Methods
ISBN: 978-1-137-51536-0 (Print) 978-1-137-51537-7 (Online)
270 p.
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