Author(s): Hanitzsch
Edition: 1
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 472
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Series Editor’s Foreword......Page 10
Preface......Page 12
Contributors......Page 14
I INTRODUCING JOURNALISM STUDIES......Page 22
1 Introduction: On Why and How We Should Do Journalism Studies......Page 24
2 Journalism History......Page 38
3 Journalism and the Academy......Page 50
4 Journalism Education......Page 63
II NEWS PRODUCTION......Page 78
5 News Organizations and Routines......Page 80
6 Journalists as Gatekeepers......Page 94
7 Objectivity, Professionalism, and Truth Seeking in Journalism......Page 109
8 Reporters and Their Sources......Page 123
9 Gender in the Newsroom......Page 137
10 Convergence and Cross-Platform Content Production......Page 151
III NEWS CONTENT......Page 166
11 Agenda Setting......Page 168
12 News Values and Selectivity......Page 182
13 Nature, Sources, and Effects of News Framing......Page 196
14 News, Discourse, and Ideology......Page 212
15 Rethinking News and Myth as Storytelling......Page 226
16 The Commercialization of News......Page 239
IV JOURNALISM AND SOCIETY......Page 256
17 Journalism and Democracy......Page 258
18 Journalism, Public Relations, and Spin......Page 271
19 Alternative and Citizen Journalism......Page 286
20 Journalism Law and Regulation......Page 300
21 Journalism Ethics......Page 316
22 Journalism and Popular Culture......Page 331
23 Audience Reception and News in Everyday Life......Page 346
V JOURNALISM STUDIES IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT......Page 360
24 Journalism and Globalization......Page 362
25 Development Journalism......Page 378
26 Advocacy Journalism in a Global Context......Page 392
27 Covering War and Peace......Page 407
28 Researching Public Service Broadcasting......Page 419
29 Comparative Journalism Studies......Page 434
30 Towards De-Westernizing Journalism Studies......Page 449
Author Index......Page 460
Subject Index......Page 464