Author(s): Bob Franklin, Scott A. Eldridge II
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2016
Cover
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
List of illustrations
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Defining Digital Journalism Studies
PART I Conceptualizing digital journalism studies
1 What’s digital? What’s journalism?
2 Deconstructing digital journalism studies
3 Digital journalism ethics
4 The digital journalist: The journalistic field, boundaries, and disquieting change
5 The time(s) of news websites
6 Digital footage from conflict zones: The politics of authenticity
7 Gatekeeping and agenda-setting: Extinct or extant in a digital era?
PART II Investigating digital journalism
8 Rethinking research methods for digital journalism studies
9 Automating massive-scale analysis of news content
10 The ethnography of digital journalism
11 Investigating ‘churnalism’ in real-time news
12 Digital journalism and big data
13 Exploring digital journalism with web surveys
PART III Financial strategies for digital journalism
14 Funding digital journalism: The challenges of consumers and the economic value of news
15 Resourcing a viable digital journalism
16 Newspaper paywalls and corporate revenues: A comparative study
17 Computational journalism and the emergence of news platforms
18 Crowdsourcing in open journalism: Benefits, challenges, and value creation
19 Community and hyperlocal journalism: A ‘sustainable’ model?
PART IV Digital journalism studies: Issues and debates
20 Mobile news: The future of digital journalism
21 Digital journalism and tabloid journalism
22 Automated journalism: A posthuman future for digital news?
23 Citizen journalism: Connections, contradictions, and conflicts
24 User comments and civility on YouTube
25 Digital transparency and accountability
PART V Developing digital journalism practice
26 Data, algorithms, and code: Implications for journalism practice in the digital age
27 Self-referential practices in journalism: Metacoverage and metasourcing
28 Live blogs, sources, and objectivity: The contradictions of real-time online reporting
29 Follow the click? Journalistic autonomy and web analytics
30 Journalists’ uses of hypertext
31 Computer-mediated creativity and investigative journalism
PART VI Digital journalism and audiences
32 Making audience engagement visible: Publics for journalism on social media platforms
33 Constructing news with audiences: A longitudinal study of CNN’s integration of participatory journalism
34 Revisiting the audience turn in journalism: How a user-based approach changes the meaning of clicks, transparency, and citizen participation
35 Between proximity and distance: Including the audience in journalism (research)
36 Audiences and information repertoires
37 The spatiotemporal dynamics of digital news audiences
PART VII Digital journalism and social media
38 Transformations of journalism culture
39 Social media and journalism: Hybridity, convergence, changing relationship with the audience, and fragmentation
40 Twitter, breaking the news, and hybridity in journalism
41 Journalists’ uses of Twitter
42 Facebook and news journalism
43 The solo videojournalist as social storyteller: Capturing subjectivity and realism with a digital toolkit and editorial vision
PART VIII Digital journalism content
44 Converged media content: Reshaping the ‘legacy’ of legacy media in the online scenario
45 Newspapers and reporting: Keystones of the journalistic field
46 The new kids on the block: The pictures, text, time-shifted audio, and podcasts of digital radio journalism online
47 Longform narrative journalism: “Snow Fall” and beyond
48 Photojournalism and citizen witnessing
49 Developments in infographics
PART IX Global digital journalism
50 Social media transforming news: Increasing public accountability in China—within limits
51 Social media and radio journalism in South Africa
52 A conundrum of contras: The ‘Murdochization’ of Indian journalism in a digital age
53 Data trumps intuition every time: Computational journalism and the digital transformation of punditry
54 Social media use, journalism, and violence in the northern Mexico border
55 Newsroom convergence: A comparative study of European public service broadcasting organizations in Scotland, Spain, Norway, and Flemish Belgium
PART X Future directions
56 Whistleblowing in a digital age: Journalism after Manning and Snowden
57 Surveillance in a digital age
Epilogue: Digital journalism: A golden age, a data-driven dream, a paradise for readers—or the proletarianization of a profession?
Index