[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] New Book: Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies, Second Edition
Thu Nov 28 23:09:57 GMT 2024
We are pleased to announce the second edition of /The Routledge
Companion to Digital Journalism Studies/, edited by Scott A. Eldridge
II, David Cheruiyot, Sandra Banjac, and Joëlle Swart (University of
Groningen, NL).
Journalism has arguably faced unprecedented disruption and
reconceptualization since the first edition of this /Companion/ was
published in 2017, and the ways we work as a field of scholars in
digital journalism studies has developed substantially in the years
since then. In this second edition, we join 77 scholars whose work
appears in this Companion, bringing together a truly global and
groundbreaking collection of essays addressing the key issues and
debates shaping the field of digital journalism studies today.
Across 54 chapters, scholars address questions over the roles journalism
and journalists play in society, exploring changes to platforms,
products, practices, and audiences that are driving new research agendas
in the field. They unpack developments in technologies, data
infrastructures, algorithms, and the businesses behind these
technologies, as well as the impact of such developments on the practice
of digital journalism. Debates concerning the decline of public trust in
journalism are considered, as are the blurred distinctions between
journalism and other forms of media and communication. In making sense
of these changes, colleagues highlight the need for digital competence
and literacy within journalism and introduce new methodological
approaches, including experimental and arts-based methods, computational
methods, and collaborative work to study them.
This newly reorganized second edition showcases the rich diversity of
work that continues to define the field of digital journalism studies,
and is a testament to the growth that this area of journalism research
has experienced since the first /Companion to Digital Journalism
Studies/, edited by Bob Franklin and Scott Eldridge, and in doing so it
offers an essential point of reference for students and researchers alike.
The e-book is already in print, and available here:
https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003334774/routledge-companion-digital-journalism-studies-scott-eldridge-ii-sandra-banjac-david-cheruiyot-joëlle-swart
The print version will be out in December (here:
https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Companion-to-Digital-Journalism-Studies/EldridgeII-Cheruiyot-Banjac-Swart/p/book/9781032369808)
*Table of Contents***
**
*Introduction: new trends, old threads in the digital journalism field*
David Cheruiyot, Sandra Banjac and Joëlle Swart
**
*Section 1 – Digital journalism (studies): theories and concepts revisited*
**
*1 Where is and isn’t Digital Journalism Studies: a meta-analysis of an
emerging field*
Manfred Antwi Kofi Asuman and Brian Ekdale
**
*2 Hybrid journalism, its logic, and its mess *
Sergio Splendore
**
*3 Explaining variation in changing news practices*
David Ryfe
**
*4 Degradation and ‘desertification’ of digital local news ecosystems*
Kristy Hess and Alison McAdam
**
*5 Rationalizing journalistic mistakes and failures: digital press
criticism and the defense of autonomy*
Danford Zirugo and David Cheruiyot
**
*6 Transparency in digital journalism*
Kyle Heim
**
*7 Dark participation in digital journalism *
Johanna Klapproth and Thorsten Quandt
**
*8 Ambivalent disruption: journalistic fields, critical incidents, and
Egyptian digital journalism*
Hanan Badr
**
*Section 2 – Citizens, audiences, and publics*
**
*9 Digital journalism and “radical audience studies”: toward a cultural
sociology of news use*
Johan Lindell
**
*10 News for all? Inequalities between news audiences in digital
journalism (studies)*
Joëlle Swart
**
*11 “Digital Snappers”: citizens, camera phones and photojournalism*
Stuart Allan
**
*12 Digital audiences and evolving news repertoires*
Chris Peters, Kim Christian Schrøder, Julie Vulpius, and Josephine Lehaff
**
*13 News literacy and digital journalism*
Melissa Tully and Patrick R. Johnson
**
*Section 3 – Technology, data, and information*
**
*14 The value(s) of journalistic ‘innovation’: developing a critical
conceptualization and research agenda*
Frank Harbers
**
*15 News recommender systems*
Juliane A. Lischka, Laura Laugwitz, and Nadja Schaetz
**
*16 Metrics-driven news: the impact of data analytics on journalism*
Ramón Salaverría
**
*17 Taking control over analytics in journalism*
Kenza Lamot and Steve Paulussen
**
*18 Always just around the corner? How fact-checkers view capabilities
and challenges in the emerging field of automated fact-checking*
Lucas Graves, Mark Stencel and Kate Wilkinson
**
*19 From positivism to complexity: the need to rethink data journalism
scholarship after more than a decade of research on the field*
Eddy Borges-Rey
**
*Section 4 – Revisiting journalism’s platforms and economies*
**
*20 Digital gatekeeping: new platforms, producers and complexities*
Peter Bro and Lisa Merete Kristensen
**
*21 Platform business poses risks for news publishers*
Oscar Westlund, Merja Myllylahti and Sherwin Chua
**
*22 Grant-funded journalism: how foundations and governments realign
incentives for news production*
Magda Konieczna
**
*23 Newspaper paywalls and value creation*
Ragnhild Kr. Olsen
*24 Mobile News *
Dawn Wheatley
**
*25 Nonprofits/Humanitarian journalism in a digital age *
Matthew Powers
**
*Section 5 – Digital Practices and Practitioners*
**
*26 Peripheral actors and journalistic boundaries*
Aljosha Karim Schapals
**
*27 Storytelling structures in data journalism: introducing the water
tower structure*
Bahareh Heravi
**
*28 Peripheral actors in lifestyle journalism *
Folker Hanusch and Kim Löhmann
**
*29 Digital sourcing*
Ansgard Heinrich and Pashcalia (Lia) Spyridou
**
*30 News practices in deep media convergence in China*
Joyce Y.M. Nip and Ting Su
**
*31 Community radio in a digital age*
Tanja Bosch
**
*32 Podcasting and diversity: developing an open-border policy for
podcast studies*
Amanda Brouwers
**
*Section 6 – Societal and global challenges*
**
*33 Seasonal journalism and climate change*
Henrik Bødker
**
*34 Digital journalism and affective proximity in reporting wars and
revolutions*
Omar Al-Ghazzi
**
*35 Safety of journalists: the symbolic violence and double burden of
marginalized journalists*
Sandra Banjac
**
*36 Navigating the dangers of mainstream visibility for marginalized
communities through an ethic of solidarity in digital journalism*
Anita Varma
**
*37 Emotions in digital journalism*
Johana Kotišová
*38 Digital networks and collaborations: addressing violence against
journalists and building resilience *
Jeannine E. Relly, Celeste González de Bustamante and Sheila B. Lalwani
**
*39 Images as moral objects: humanitarian photography and the limits of
image circulation*
Lilie Chouliaraki and Richard Stupart
**
*40 Digital hate: normalization in management of online hostility*
Gregory P. Perreault
**
*Section 7 – Political and ideological Challenges*
**
*41 Digital journalism and populism*
Lena Frischlich
**
*42 Open-source investigations and the new assemblages of digital
investigative journalism*
Philip Di Salvo
**
*43 From studios and advocates to brand practitioners: tracing the
influence of political and commercial interests on digital narrative
journalism*
David O. Dowling
**
*44 Countering political disinformation*
Kevin C. Mudavadi and Dani Madrid-Morales
**
*45 Populist rhapsody: struggle for trust in Czech public service media
in a fragmented media environment*
Klára Smejkal
**
*46 Digital surveillance and the transformation of journalism practice
in the digital age*
Allen Munoriyarwa
**
*47 Digital tabloidization in an age of populism*
Khulekani Ndlovu
**
*Section 8 – Methods for/in digital journalism studies*
**
*48 X journalism: a concept and an observational tool for tracing the
evolution of the field*
Julius Reimer and Wiebke Loosen
**
*49 Advancements in experimental research approaches*
Esther Greussing
**
*50 Researching information exposure using computational methods*
Lisa Merten
**
*51 Revisiting the ethnography of digital journalism*
Hayes Mawindi Mabweazara and Wambui Wamunyu
**
*52 Reassembling digital journalism through arts-based methods*
Sander Hölsgens
**
*53 Methodological challenges in audience research*
Anna Sophie Kümpel and Luise Anter
**
*54 Will the center hold? Relocating journalism in the digital*
Marcel Broersma and Scott A. Eldridge II
**
*Contact: *(s.a.eldridge.ii /at/ rug.nl)
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]