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[ecrea] Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 7.2 published
Mon Aug 06 09:46:03 GMT 2018
Intellect is pleased to announce that the /Journal of Applied Journalism
& Media Studies
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=220/view,page=0/>/
7.2 is now available! For more information about this issue including
how to purchase and subscribe, click here >> https://bit.ly/2vH0j8Z
<https://bit.ly/2vH0j8Z>
_
_*_Press councils as a traditional instrument of media self-regulation:
The perceptions of European journalists_*
Authors: Marcel Mauri i de los Ríos, Ruth Rodríguez-Martínez and Mònica
Figueras Maz And Maddalena Fedele
Page Start: 221
Press councils are among the traditional self-regulatory instruments
present in most European countries and, as a part of a wider network of
accountability systems, need to be analysed and evaluated. This article
presents part of the results of a cross-national European project
studying journalism, ethics and regulating systems, and focuses on the
opinion of journalists from twelve European and two Arab Mediterranean
countries regarding the perceived impact of press councils as
instruments of self-regulation, compared with other traditional
mechanisms. The study was conducted with a quantitative approach: an
online questionnaire was administered to 1762 journalists, and data were
analysed by using the SPSS software (significance set at <0.05). The
sample was selected based on several criteria to achieve representative
national sub-samples. The journalists’ answers about the perceived
impact of different regulatory and self-regulatory instruments are
analysed. Press councils are seen as having a mid-range perceived impact
when compared with the other instruments. Journalists from the countries
where press councils have been in place for a long time perceive the
impact of these instruments to be higher, with the exception of the
United Kingdom, a country that was a pioneer in the consolidation of
press councils. Middle-aged, male and lower-income journalists attribute
the lowest impact to press councils.
_*Intermedia agenda-setting effect in corporate news: Examining the
influence of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal on local
newspapers*_
Authors: Xiaoqun Zhang
Page Start: 245
This study tested the first-level and second-level intermedia
agenda-setting effect in corporate news. Significant correlations were
found between the numbers of articles of nine food companies in the two
US elite newspapers and many local newspapers. Significant correlations
were also found between the number of articles containing seven
attributes of a focal company, between the number of articles with four
tonalities about it, and between the number of articles with four
tonalities about its attributes. No strong evidence for the causal
relationships was found. The significant correlations suggested that
elite newspapers can be used as a proxy of local newspapers to explore
the relationship between media coverage and corporate reputation. The
test was based on a content analysis of 2817 news articles from The New
York Times, Wall Street Journal and many US local newspapers.
_*Results of framing in music journalism: Benefits and burdens of being
designated heir to a cultural icon*_
Authors: Jordan M. McClain
Page Start: 265
This article aims to expand media framing research beyond traditional
content analyses of political coverage and examines the consequences of
framing found in music journalism, since entertainment coverage receives
a significant share of media and audience attention. To understand the
results of such framing, nineteen interviews were conducted with content
producers – a specific group of expert writers, editors and publishers
who offered essential perspectives about the consequences of a
particular case – focusing on the example of coverage frequently
characterizing the band Phish (1983–present) vis-à-vis the Grateful Dead
(1965–1995). Findings indicate that framing can be a problem for the
framed subject, but can also lead to certain benefits.
*_They never made it to the end: Reader uses of a multimedia narrative_*
Authors: Kate Kartveit
Page Start: 289
How does an audience respond to the structure, visual design and
narrative flow of a multimedia narrative? Are readers following the
course that an author-driven linear reading path suggests? This study
investigates these questions through an eye-tracking experiment. In
research within news websites that employ eye-tracking experiments the
case in this study represents a new phenomenon for investigation, the
longform multimedia feature. It is also especially interesting to
explore how the readers interact with this type of narrative because the
narrative is constructed as an author-driven embedded multimedia story
and thus resemble what Dowling and Vogan describe as the ‘urtext’ of the
multimedia longform genre. The findings of this study indicate that
readers navigate according to the authordriven narrative flow within a
chapter/part. But the readers in this study missed or misunderstood the
navigational options between story parts. The ongoing digitalization in
media outlets and the experimentation and developing of journalistic
products might benefit from research addressing multi-methodological
approaches.
_*When societies crash: A critical analysis of news media’s social role
in the aftermath of national disasters*_
Authors: Stijn Joye
Page Start: 311
Apart from their primary role as news providers in disaster situations,
news media can also assume a broader social role. Drawing on a
critically informed qualitative content analysis of the Belgian news
reporting on a national disaster, the article reveals a twofold
articulation of this social role. The first consisted in newspapers
highlighting the emotional dimension with potential societal
implications of raising compassion and identification. Second, we found
a strong articulation of a discourse of (national) unity and community,
aimed at restoring the disrupted social order in the disaster’s
aftermath. Both aspects were discursively established by a dominant
presence of emotional testimonies, strategies of personalization and by
the use of inclusive language permeated with references to nation or
community. The study highlights the important social role of journalism
in disaster situations and events involving human suffering.
_*The Moroccan digital media’s representation of the Moroccan woman: A
multimodal analysis to Hespress discourse*_
Authors: Rachid Acim
Page Start: 329
Of the many influences on how Moroccan people perceive the Moroccan
woman, Moroccan digital media is presumably the most powerful tool used
throughout; in fact, Moroccan digital media direct the public opinion,
frame specific images, and perpetuate both realistic and unrealistic
speculations about the Moroccan woman, whose voice is carefully selected
and whose presence goes sometimes reported and at other times
unreported. This article is a deep reflection of the overall images
chosen to manufacture consensus about the Moroccan woman in the Moroccan
digital media; more specifically, emphasis is going to be laid on how
Hespress, as an emerging Moroccan news outlet, advertises different
conceptions and representations about the Moroccan woman at home and
overseas. The article is predicated on the notion of framing news
stories, which propel journalists to decide on what is newsworthy and
what is not. The researcher’s pivotal argument is that a process of
selection is obviously developed by Hespress in its dealing with and
detailing on the question of the Moroccan woman. Put otherwise, a large
space is arguably accorded to certain women who have outperformed their
peers in many vital sectors of life and led successful stories
nationwide. As for those women, whose stories do not correlate with the
policy and the editorial line of Hespress, they are devoiced and still
marginalized. To address this topic more effectively, the researcher
suggests utilizing a multimodal analysis to the discourse of Hespress
about the Moroccan woman. A preliminary examination of the literature
documenting the media’s discourse about her will be considered. Then, an
elaboration of the methodology adopted will be explored. Finally, some
pedagogical recommendations will be advanced in this article to enable
students promote critical reading and hone not only their analytical but
also their interpretative skills as concerns Hespress discourse on the
Moroccan woman.
*_Journalists’ and news editors’ views on children as news subjects in
Albanian media: Exploring issues of newsworthiness and self-censorship
_*
Authors: Emiljano Kaziaj
Page Start: 351
This article explores the views of journalists and news editors on
children in Albania, through a series of interviews with noted media
professionals. This study finds that stories about children are not
considered as newsworthy and children are mostly seen as unreliable
stand-alone sources by journalists and news editors. As a mechanism to
mitigate the risks of being refused by their editors, journalists
increase the newsworthiness of children-focused news items by directing
the story towards adults (mostly politicians) and by quoting them.
Considering children’s perspectives in news coverage is essential, as it
contributes to a social order that acknowledges children’s agency.
_*God and sport: Orientalism in Sports Illustrated coverage of religion*_
Authors: Patrick Ferrucci And Gregory P. Perreault
Page Start: 371
This study utilizes textual analysis to analyse how the popular and
influential sports magazine Sports Illustrated covered religion over the
period from 1 January 1994, to 1 September 2014. The data showed that
the magazine wrote about religion in three primary ways: as an exotic
characteristic that makes an athlete somehow odd, as incongruous since
sports themselves display similar characteristics to religion, and as a
front to hide some insidious real motive. These results are analysed
through the lens of Edward Said’s theory of orientalism, which argues
that the press tends to cover dominant groups as ‘normal’ and ‘others’
the remaining groups, which has been shown, historically, to have
damaging impact. This study concludes with a discussion concerning how
SI’s coverage of religion could impact society.
*_Cracking the coding ceiling: Looking at gender construction in data
journalism from a field theory perspective_*
Authors: Sara de Vuyst
Page Start: 387
This article examines the construction of gender in data journalism from
a field theory perspective. It focuses on the internal logic of data
journalism as well as on its relationship with the computer field. Our
research question explores how male and female data journalists
accumulate capital and build careers in data journalism. We conducted 26
qualitative interviews with a cross-national sample of journalists who
had varying levels of interest and experience in data journalism. The
findings indicate that female journalists see both opportunities and
challenges in data journalism. On the one hand, women entered the field
of data journalism in an attempt to avoid male-dominated networks,
harassment and gender segregation, which limits their opportunities for
recruitment and career advancement in traditional journalism. On the
other hand, data journalistic skills were discursively gendered. Digital
capital, which could be exchanged for greater amounts of symbolic
capital, was typically associated with masculinity.
*_Teaching vicarious trauma in the journalism classroom: An examination
of educational provision in UK universities_*
*_
_*Authors: Doug Specht And Julia Tsilman
Page Start: 407
The connections between vicarious trauma and the viewing of violent
User-Generated Content (UGC) are becoming an increasingly important
topic in journalism. As more journalist work begins to rely, or at least
incorporate UGC, the risks to journalists have been shown to increase.
This can lead to short, unpleasant careers, and in some cases, serious,
long-lasting mental health risks. Yet while this discussion is beginning
to unfold in the newsroom, universities are lagging behind in their
understanding of the topic. This article, through content analysis of
undergraduate course materials, and through interviews with lecturers
and journalists, found that almost no course in the United Kingdom is
teaching the risks of vicarious trauma or UGC. It was found that while
some educators wish to make more of the topic, a number of institutional
factors, such as lack of training and time, worries over duty of care,
and available resources make this a difficult, if not impossible task.
The article recommends a new emphasis is placed on vicarious trauma,
coupled with training and interdepartmental support.
_*Journalism meets games: Newsgames as a new digital genre. Theory,
boundaries, utilization*_
*_
_*Authors: Klaus Meier
Page Start: 429
Newsgames are a young genre of digital journalism. This article analyses
the genre on the basis of cases from various countries, puts it into
context, critically examines the theoretical foundation and presents a
study of utilization. A scientific definition takes the perspective of
‘boundary work’: It distinguishes Newsgames from other digital games
(such as interestdriven, entertaining or educating games) and draws a
boundary between Newsgames and other digital journalistic genres (such
as multimedia reports, web documentaries or types of data journalism).
The drawing of Newsgames boundaries highlights the general problems of
drawing boundaries of journalism in digital media. To date, no study on
the utilization of Newsgames exists. Our explorative and qualitative
interviews and observations are situated within the framework of uses
and gratifications research. Main categories are the level of awareness,
information performance and success factors of Newsgames. The results
show that the new genre possesses a wide range of possibilities that
cannot be uniformly assessed. Ethical doubts as to whether serious
topics should be played in games are offset against the benefit of
creating interest and empathy. Users want to experience success when
playing – an aspect that emphasizes the competitive character and
distinguishes Newsgames from other genres.
*_The journalism of Gannett Blog: Revealing communities of practice and
social construction through collective dynamics_*
*_
_*Authors: William Schulte
Page Start: 445
Gannett Company was one of the largest media operations in the United
States but struggled in recent years with loss of revenue and
circulation. Gannett Blog reported news related to the company from 2007
to 2014. The blog was independent and covered corporate news, job loss
and issues of ethics. This used Gannett Blog to study how individuals
reacted to their changing workplace. As information was gathered and
presented from multiple users, a crowdsourcing dynamic gave context to
Gannett’s landscape. Theories of communities of practice and social
construction underpin this study. This study suggests that the rhetoric
on Gannett Blog evolved into more than a distribution channel for
information. It became a social space where original information evolved
and helped negotiate social meaning for the users. Overall, this study
found that communities of professionals could be influential in growing
a journalistic product as per the tenets of the communities of influence
model. This study also identified themes consistent with news workers
using Gannett Blog for community building, expanding knowledge and
maintaining professionalism during industry change.
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