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2. A Contrastive Study of Hedges in COVID-19 Reports Selected from China Daily and the New York Times
- Author
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Ya'nan, Wang, Zhiling, Tian, and Jinghua, Wang
- Abstract
Based on Jef Verschueren's Adaptation Theory, Lakoff's definition and Prince et al.'s classification of hedges, this paper takes New York Times and China Daily from January 23rd to April 8th, 2020 as corpus sources, randomly selects 39 COVID-19 reports, and makes a contrastive study of hedges among them, aiming at exploring the similarities and differences in the use of hedges in COVID-19 reports selected from Chinese and American mainstream newspapers and further revealing their influencing factors.
- Published
- 2023
3. Scout Rally at Birmingham and Imperial Scout Exhibition 1913: Polish Scouts
- Author
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Stepnik, Krzysztof
- Abstract
Scout Rally at Birmingham and Imperial Scout Exhibition organised in July of 1913 by the Boy Scouts Association constituted educational propaganda of the British Empire. The term "imperial", which was used in the British press, reflects the ideological meaning of this outsized event which gathered scouts from the United Kingdom and its dominions, and much smaller groups of scouts from Europe, including quite numerous groups from Poland. In the eyes of Poles, British "imperialism" or "patriotism" confronted as an ideal compared to Russian and German rule, and their attitudes were enthusiastically Anglomaniacal. This is the psychological key to understand the attractiveness of performing on the British arena for the representation of the young generation of Poles who were invited. For Polish scouts, the Scout Rally in Birmingham was an opportunity to demonstrate not only their skills but also patriotism as a function of political presence. This is how the Polish press understood these things, and which after the British -- what needs to be emphasised -- paid the most attention to the events in Birmingham. The most important Polish dailies publishing in Cracow, Warsaw, Poznan, and Lvov (now Lviv) closely followed the course of the rally, which was given the rank of success by a two-sentence "depeche" from London and a lengthy letter published in the "Czas" daily paper. The object of interest for the author of the article is the book written by the founder of Polish scouting, Andrzej Malkowski, which constitutes a noteworthy record of observations made by him during the Scout Rally as well as those made by other organisers of the Polish delegation's trip and of letters from journalists who accompanied this delegation and sent their correspondence to the Polish press from Birmingham, London, and Paris. Only one journalist broke out from apologetic opinions about the excellent performance of Polish scouts, who noticed shortcomings in performance and wrote about them. The article introduces the content of these letters and interprets and compares them. The opinion about the triumphant rally in Birmingham rooted firmly in Polish public opinion, constituting an important element of the founding myth of Polish scouting, which in the history of this movement is worth noting.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. "It's the Best Job on the Paper" – The Courts Beat During the Journalism Crisis.
- Author
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Jones, Richard
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,PRESS ,FREEDOM of the press ,LAW reports, digests, etc. ,TELEVISION journalists ,LAYOFFS - Abstract
Local journalism in the UK has been described as being in "crisis". Local newspapers have experienced years of declining circulations and staff cuts, leading to questions about how effectively those institutions can continue to perform normative functions of journalism. One of those is to report on the courts. Through analysis of 22 semi-structured interviews with local newspaper reporters who cover the courts beat, agency court reporters who supply the local press, as well as broadcast journalists involved in both local and national court coverage, this paper helps to establish how the daily newswork of court journalists has developed amid a turbulent period in journalism, especially local journalism. The research finds that court reporting has been less affected than other news beats but faces a series of challenges related to financial cuts and other pressures. While the local press has become even more essential to the provision of court reporting, a central part of the news media's fourth estate role, those challenges affect the ability of court reporters to perform this function. This paper recommends that policymakers consider using a form of public funding to guarantee the future of court reporting at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. What Makes News Newsworthy: An Experimental Test of Where a News Story Is Published (or Not) and Its Perceived Newsworthiness.
- Author
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Hassell, Hans J. G.
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS - Abstract
Previous research has attributed media convergence to, among other things, where the news was originally published. That research, however, has struggled to identify causal relationships between a news item's publication in a particular outlet and journalists' perceptions of a story's newsworthiness. This relationship is difficult to identify because of the correlation between publication in a particular outlet and many other factors that also impact newsworthiness. This paper uses an experiment embedded within a survey of over 1,500 U.S. political journalists to test the impact of a news story's previous publication history on journalists' views of the newsworthiness of that news item. Compared with previously unpublished stories, the publication of a news story in a national paper has no significant positive effect on the perceived newsworthiness of a story. The origin of a story in a local outlet, however, causes journalists to perceive that story to be less newsworthy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Metrics as the new normal – exploring the evolution of audience metrics as a decision-making tool in Swedish newsrooms 1995-2022.
- Author
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Tenor, Carina
- Subjects
NEWSROOMS ,DECISION making ,PROFESSIONAL autonomy ,JOURNALISM ,PORTFOLIO management (Investments) - Abstract
This paper explores the implementation process of digital audience metrics as a key strategy in Swedish legacy news production during the last three decades. The historical adoption of metrics in the newsroom is not new but has grown fast (from analogue audience measurements in the 1950s and monthly statistics of unique visitors in the 1990s to a wide range of real-time data). This trend is important because Swedish news organisations have invested heavily in data analytics, which involves integrating metrics-driven journalism into a particularly strong and homogenous tradition of professional autonomy. Based on interviews with key senior managers and supported by the analysis of trade publications, as well as published interviews, the findings reveal three chronologically overlapping periods: the naïve stage of 'getting online', the destructive period of 'social media prominence', and the end of the 'paywall hesitation'. This trend has led to a new equilibrium in which audience metrics are perceived as better aligned with the professional values of news selection. More importantly, the industry-wide embrace of metrics as guidance for more relevant and rational news production revolves around two main factors: First, although metrics are tied to organisational targets, they remain under editorial control. Second, the degree of granularity and diversification of metrics allow for wider support of their use for strategic purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Análisis del encuadre léxico en los editoriales sobre la guerra de Cuba publicados en la prensa española.
- Author
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Mancera Rueda, Ana
- Subjects
FRAMES (Linguistics) ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,NOUNS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,PUBLIC opinion ,TREND setters ,SPANISH-American War, 1898 - Abstract
Copyright of CIRCULO de Linguistica Aplicada a la Comunicacion is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Is Travel Journalism more similar to Newspaper Language or the Language of Tourism? A corpus-based study.
- Author
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Brett, David Finbar
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & languages ,TOURISM websites ,NEWSPAPER sections, columns, etc. ,TRAVEL websites ,OBJECTIVITY in journalism ,JOURNALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISTIC ethics - Abstract
The Travel section of a newspaper is composed of texts which purport to at least partly comply with the ethical value of journalistic objectivity, yet the border between this type of writing and the overtly promotional texts produced in the tourism sector is somewhat blurred. This paper compares linguistic features in samples of text from Tourist Board websites and the Travel section and nine other sections of The Guardian to determine whether Travel Journalism can be categorised as a type of journalism, or whether it bears distinct similarities to Tourism Discourse. The results suggest that Travel Journalism differs from the other newspaper sections and is quite similar to the Language of Tourism on the basis of some features. However, in relation to others, it is decidedly different, thereby suggesting that Travel Journalism can be cleared of the allegation of being unduly influenced by the texts produced by the tourism industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Navigating Precarity: Disruption and Decline at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- Author
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Sybert, Jeanna
- Subjects
PRECARITY ,POISONS ,EXECUTIVES ,PRODUCTIVE life span ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
Since 2017, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PG) has faced multiple disruptions, including a bitter labor conflict and various public controversies, that have threatened the credibility of this long-standing metropolitan newspaper. To understand how PG journalists and its union have navigated such pressures, this study uses the concept of compounding precarity to capture the multiple, overlapping parts of journalistic precarity that together effect the lives and work of journalists. By interviewing current and past PG journalists, the analysis reveals the individual- and collective-level tactics workers used to navigate these conditions. The study finds that, though journalists individualized precarity at times, union logics largely structured how they responded to compounding precarity. While this illustrates the union's influence at the paper, its inability to sway upper management in numerous disputes reveals the limits of collective organizing at the PG. Given that these issues are not exclusive to the PG, this study highlights the need for cross-coalitional building and structural changes across the news industry in order to spare journalists and journalism from the toxic effects of precarity in late-stage capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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10. SAINT JOHN: John Stempel and the Indiana University Department of Journalism
- Author
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Johnson, Owen V.
- Subjects
Newspapers ,Editors ,Journalism ,History - Abstract
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of St. John, He has trampled out the paragraphs we worked so hard upon, He has loosed his copy pencil on [...]
- Published
- 2022
11. Redemption vs. #MeToo: How Journalists Addressed Kobe Bryant's Rape Case in Crafting His Memory.
- Author
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Walters, Patrick
- Subjects
FEMINISM ,WOMEN'S basketball ,METOO movement ,JOURNALISTS ,FEMINIST theory ,RAPE ,BASKETBALL fans - Abstract
This paper examines how journalists addressed Kobe Bryant's 2003 rape case as they constructed the basketball star's memory through coverage of his death. Bryant, who died in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26, 2020, was accused of raping a hotel clerk in Colorado; charges were dropped when the woman refused to testify, but the parties reached a civil settlement. This textual analysis examines 488 news stories about Bryant's death, content produced by 18 U.S. news organizations (12 newspapers, two magazines, three online-only publications and a cable broadcast outlet) between Jan. 26 and Oct. 31, 2020. It finds that coverage created a field of discourse that mainly celebrated Bryant for his athletic greatness, as a family man, cultural icon and supporter of women's basketball. The paper argues that, despite the influence of social media and the #MeToo movement, journalists continue to oversimplify and cleanse the narratives of famous men with problematic pasts. The paper calls on journalists to draw from feminist theory and utilize triangulated reporting methods to incorporate marginalized viewpoints when memorializing famous men with problematic pasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Framing The Belt and Road Initiative in Australian Newspaper Journalism from 2013 to 2020: From Lukewarm Acceptance to Outright Hostility.
- Author
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YUAN JIANG
- Subjects
HUMAN rights violations ,JOURNALISM ,HOSTILITY ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,NEWSPAPERS ,BELT & Road Initiative ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is a central policy of the Chinese government. This paper analyses the evolution of BRI narratives from 2013 to 2020 in Australian newspaper journalism. In the field of media and communications, there has been a lack of analysis regarding the BRI narratives in Australia. By employing frame analysis, this paper fills in the gap to record the evolution of the BRI narratives in Australian journalism. This paper selects six representative journalists' works from four Australian mainstream newspapers: The Sydney Morning Herald (SMH), The Age, The Australian and The Australian Financial Review (AFR). It shows how the BRI has been gradually politicized and the BRI narratives in Australian journalism shifted in tone from mostly positive to highly critical. More concretely, this paper elucidates that from 2013 to 2020, the BRI has been gradually related to allying with like-minded countries to stand up against China, human rights violations of the Chinese government in Xinjiang and Tibet, Australia's sovereignty, Australia's global order choice between China-led authoritarianism and liberal democracy, and the debt trap strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
13. Data journalism in Spain and Austria: features, organizational structure, limitations, and future perspectives.
- Author
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Córdoba-Cabús, Alba, Huber, Brigitte, and Farias-Batlle, Pedro
- Subjects
DATA modeling ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,FREEDOM of the press ,JOURNALISM ,ORGANIZATIONAL transparency ,ONLINE journalism ,DIGITAL media ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
This paper makes an important contribution to comparative research by examining data journalism in Spain and Austria. This paper examines the practice of data journalism from a triple perspective: (a) the common features of day-to-day work, (b) the organizational structure and the role of the teams in newsrooms, and (c) the obstacles to and the future of data-driven reporting. Results from content analysis of data-driven news stories in El país and Der standard (N = 136) show differences and similarities in the covered topics, sources, narrative style, visualizations, interactive functions, and levels of transparency. Interestingly, only 36.8% of the analyzed news stories correspond to the normative expectations of transparency by incorporating both sources and methodological details. While the Spanish newspaper shows significantly higher levels of transparency compared with the Austrian newspaper, both newspapers perform very similarly when it comes to providing access to raw data, which was the case in only every fifth news story analyzed. Findings from focused interviews with the heads of data journalism teams deliver interesting insights into specific challenges that each news outlet is facing when creating day-to-day data-driven news stories. This research confirms the relevance that data journalism has achieved in countries such as Spain and demonstrates the effort of journalists in countries without access to information and transparency laws to create data-driven stories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Code-Switching in Yoruba Newspapers as A Reflection of The Linguistic Half-Caste Mode in Nigerian Journalism.
- Author
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Salawu, Abiodun and Amenaghawon, Francis
- Subjects
CODE switching (Linguistics) ,NEWSPAPERS ,SPEECH ,JOURNALISM ,BILINGUALISM ,READING comprehension - Abstract
This paper examines code-switching as a language style of Yoruba newspapers, within the larger context of the day-to-day speech mannerisms of Nigerians. This linguistic mode is a result of culture mix and has encroached on the indigenous languages of the peoples, and the style (of the writings) of indigenous language media. The paper analyses the texts of Alaroye newspaper to demonstrate the phenomenon. Questions raised concerned the purpose of code-switching, as well as its effects on Yoruba language and influence on respondents' interest in reading Alaroye. Survey and content analysis were the research designs used, while purposive sampling was preferred for the selection of seventy-five respondents to the questionnaire and six who were interviewed. Findings show that code-switching simplifies, aids comprehension, increases interest in indigenous language newspapers and accommodates the bilingualism of readers. Respondents agree that code-switching contributes to the linguistic half-caste mode of journalism and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Religion in Finnish Newspapers on an Ordinary Day: Criticism and Support.
- Author
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Taira, Teemu and Kyyrö, Jere
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,FOREIGN news ,EVANGELICAL churches ,RELIGIONS ,RELIGIOUS institutions - Abstract
This article examines how three Finnish newspapers covered religion on an ordinary day in the 2010s. The study demonstrates that although religion may not be the primary interest of the media, it is by no means absent from everyday newspaper coverage. National and regional papers as well as freesheets have their own styles and emphases, but the differences in Finnish media are moderate. While coverage of diverse religions is not absent from the journalism – the presence of Islam in the foreign news is particularly notable – the overall coverage of religion in Finnish newspapers on an ordinary day highlights the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland, the dominant religious institution. Newspapers provide moderate support for the existing role and status of the dominant church against explicitly secularist views, even when critically examining problems within it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Local Newspapers' Transition to Online Publishing and Video Use: Experiences from Norway.
- Author
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Puijk, Roel, Hestnes, Eli Beate, Holm, Simon, Jakobsen, Andrea, and Myrdal, Marianne
- Subjects
STREAMING video & television ,INTERNET publishing ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,NEWSPAPERS ,PARENT companies ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
This paper traces convergence and innovation processes in five local newspapers in the Inland Norway region. It is an explorative bottom-up study of how local legacy newspapers' use of digital technology relates to organisational factors and business models, as well as their journalism. Based on interviews with chief editors and video journalists, the paper shows that these local newspapers adapted in specific ways, sometimes differ from their national counterparts. Each newspaper established a web-edition and later implemented a paywall. This change of business model relates to a change of focus from clicks to subscribers. The change is also reflected in their journalism, focussing on certain topics and more in-depth reporting. While attempts at video reporting turned out to be expensive, streaming local sports became an important element in attracting new subscribers. However, it was easier for those newspapers integrated in larger conglomerates to use these innovations as the parent company provided competence in analysing viewer figures, and because innovations could spread from one local newspaper in the company to the others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Institutions of Epistemic Vigilance: The Case of the Newspaper Press.
- Author
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Szegőfi, Ákos and Heintz, Christophe
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,SOCIAL evolution ,SOCIAL institutions ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INFORMATION resources ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
Can people efficiently navigate the modern communication environment, and if yes, how? We hypothesize that in addition to psychological capacities of epistemic vigilance, which evaluate the epistemic value of communicated information, some social institutions have evolved for the same function. Certain newspapers for instance, implement processes, distributed among several experts and tools, whose function is to curate information. We analyze how information curation is done at the institutional level and what challenges it meets. We also investigate what factors favor the cultural evolution of institutions of epistemic vigilance: these include people's preference for accurate and reliable information and their ability to assess communicated information in view of the source's epistemic authority; but also contingent historical factors that make it worth – or not – to contribute to the maintenance of institutions of epistemic vigilance. We conclude the paper by considering the challenges and vulnerabilities of these institutions in the Digital Age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A public good: Can government really save the press?
- Author
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Walters, Patrick
- Subjects
PUBLIC goods ,JOURNALISM ,JOURNALISTS ,INVESTMENTS ,FINANCE - Abstract
Amid concerns of 'market failure' in the U.S. commercial news industry, this paper explores more than a decade's worth of scholarly arguments that government intervention and investment is the best solution to what many deem a crisis in American journalism. Through the lenses of First Amendment theory and political economy, the analysis examines a range of ideas and proposals that, in many ways, began with Robert W. McChesney and John Nichols' The Death and Life of American Journalism in 2010 and continue up through Victor Pickard's Democracy Without Journalism: Confronting the Misinformation Society in 2020. The paper concludes that, while a 'positive' interpretation of the First Amendment would seem to demand such intervention, the window of opportunity has closed due to a range of political and economic forces that have either developed or become further entrenched over the past decade. To that end, it calls on journalists and journalism scholars to work to shift the discourse of journalism, to characterise it as an essential, nonpartisan public good – one no different than education. It argues that such a shift, along with enough evidence of further market failure, could someday help inspire the necessary political and economic will to help rescue the floundering news industry on a wider scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Commentary: What price eyeballs? – a commentary/reflection on Benoit, Thomas and Martin (2021).
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,INTELLECT ,NEWSPAPERS ,ANXIETY ,PARENT-child relationships ,CLIMATE change ,PARENTS ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
In a response to a research paper which analyses how US newspapers represent young people and parents in their response to climate crisis, this commentary observes that the newspapers achieve some advantage in selecting frames, which privilege adult behaviour at the expense of actions taken by young people. It suggests that one effect of newspapers' choice to frame teens' awareness and activities surrounding climate change in disparaging terms may be to increase any eco‐anxiety by devaluing it. It argues that this is done to benefit the newspapers by supporting rather than challenging the schema of their adult readers, following a commercial rather than societal agenda. A subsidiary effect may be to drive younger people away from mainstream media, which fails to represent their viewpoint and towards misinformation and disinformation from unreliable sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Does the Ideology of the Newsroom Affect the Provision of Media Slant?
- Author
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Hassell, Hans J. G., Miles, Matthew R., and Reuning, Kevin
- Subjects
OBJECTIVITY in journalism ,NEWSPAPERS ,IDEOLOGY ,NEWSROOMS ,READERSHIP - Abstract
Although research on the provision of ideologically slanted news has focused on consumers' demands or news ownership's profit margins and political agendas, little focus has been paid to those individuals who create the news content: the political journalists. We use a new measure of newspaper ideology derived from a large scale survey of journalists to estimate the ideology of almost 700 newsrooms, a substantial increase over previous efforts. By estimating newsroom ideology independent of content we show that newsroom ideology influences the responsiveness of newspapers to the demands of readers. We find that newsroom ideology has an effect on the ideological slant of news content even after controlling for consumer preferences. While consumer demand influences the ideological content of the news, the ideology of the newsroom that produces the news skews the responsiveness to the demands of readership and ultimately affects the production of ideological slant in the news. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. CULTURAL JOURNALISM IN BRAZIL AND PORTUGAL: a cross-country analysis (2012-2018).
- Author
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SCALABRIN MÜLLER, MARIANA, CABECINHAS, ROSA, and SANTOS SILVA, DORA
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,CONTENT analysis ,NEWSPAPERS ,STEREOTYPES - Abstract
Copyright of Brazilian Journalism Research is the property of Sur le journalisme, About journalism, Sobre jornalismo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Adopting a mojo mindset: Training newspaper reporters in mobile journalism.
- Author
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Salzmann, Anja, Guribye, Frode, and Gynnild, Astrid
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISTS ,STORYTELLING ,FOLKLORE - Abstract
Due to the visual turn in journalism and the emergence of mobile journalism, many newspaper journalists have had to change the way they work and learn to use new tools. To face these changes, traditional news organizations apply different strategies to increase staff competencies in using new production tools and creating innovative content in new formats. In this paper, we investigate how a specific training arrangement was experienced by a group of 40 print editors and journalists in a German regional publishing house. The journalists were introduced to audio-visual storytelling and reporting with smartphones in a 2-week training course. The training arrangements were studied using participant observation and in-depth interviews, followed by a thematic analysis of the data. The study indicates that for print journalists and editors, the transition from the print to the mojo mindset depends on three dimensions: (i) mastering mojo skills, (ii) adopting visual thinking and (iii) integrating ethical and legal awareness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. So much more than news: Revisiting press epochs from an explorative study of non-news genres in Danish newspapers, 1918–2018.
- Author
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WILLIG, IDA, BENGTSSON, METTE, BLACH-ØRSTEN, MARK, and JØRNDRUP, HANNE
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,WORLD War II ,GENRE studies - Abstract
Newspapers are so much more than news content. However, the history of journalism is typically told through studies of news genres or news epochs. In this article, we test the theory of three epochs of Danish press history in an explorative study of non-news genres, as exemplified by letters to the editor, editorials, and “celebratory items” on birthdays and deaths. Through an investigation of newspapers from 1918 to 2018, we demonstrate how these non-news forms were established in the first half of the twentieth century, were institutionalised during the period after World War II, and have been transitioning over the past two decades. This confirms the theory of the partisan press epoch, the omnibus press epoch, and the segment press epoch in Danish press history. At the same time, this study expands our understanding of these three press epochs by showing how the non-news genres provided in printed newspapers are important in the construction of readers as a class in the partisan press period; as a population in the omnibus press period; and, most recently, as elites in the segment press period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. 'Absolutely Delighted': Media Coverage of the Arrest of Peter Sutcliffe and the Impact on the Contempt of Court Act 1981.
- Author
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Jones, Richard
- Subjects
- *
CONTEMPT of court , *ARREST , *SERIAL murderers , *PRESS conferences , *LAW reports, digests, etc. , *SERIAL murders , *SHAME - Abstract
Reporting on crime and the courts are among the classic functions of journalism. In the UK, journalists and others must abide by the Contempt of Court Act 1981, the main piece of primary legislation aimed at ensuring coverage of legal matters is fair to the participants. The restrictions are generally tighter in practice than in jurisdictions such as the US, where the media has a much freer hand to engage in pre-trial reporting. This paper argues that media coverage of the arrest of the so-called 'Yorkshire Ripper' serial killer, Peter Sutcliffe, in 1981 while Parliament was considering the question of contempt, has made the UK regime tougher than it might otherwise have been. Excessive reporting was influenced by an unusually celebratory police news conference. This news coverage coloured the contemporary debate around contempt, and any opportunity for a more relaxed approach to contempt in the UK's jurisdictions was lost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The voice of reason: a thematic appraisal of editorial coverage of Nigeria's 2015 elections.
- Author
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Eze, Ogemdi Uchenna
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,PEACE ,VOTING ,PUBLIC opinion polls - Abstract
This study is an analysis of four Nigerian newspaper editorials' (the Guardian, Vanguard, Independent and Leadership) coverage of the 2015 general elections in Nigeria. Peace and solution journalism perspectives provided the theoretical insights through which the examination is made. This qualitative study, located within an interpretivist tradition, identified 101 election-related editorials for the study. Using a purposive sampling technique, 25 editorials that were illustrative of the three themes: violence-free polls, rational voting, and credible electoral process, which emerged from reading and re-reading of the editorials, were selected for analysis. The research showed that the editorials sought to a. redirect the attention of the electorate caught up in the personalisation of issues by politicians towards key issues affecting the nation, to guide their electoral decisions, b. appeal to political actors to stem the spate of violence in the polity and c. advocate for a credible electoral process to produce leadership that would be truly reflective of the wishes and aspirations of the people. The editorials made moral and ethical appeals urging "supra-national" and patriotic attitudes as well as more detailed process interventions. This study highlights the role of editorials in peacebuilding efforts at such times as elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Expanding peace journalism: A new model for analyzing media representations of immigration.
- Author
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Kalfeli, Naya, Frangonikolopoulos, Christos, and Gardikiotis, Antonis
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,MASS media ,NEWSPAPERS ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
This article aims to expand peace journalism scholarship by proposing a new peace journalism model for analyzing media representations of immigration. By employing framing and content analysis, the paper takes a closer look at the ways in which four Greek newspapers portrayed immigration in crisis-stricken Greece between 2011 and 2014. Results indicate that a conflict frame prevailed in the majority of all newspaper articles analyzed. In this context, immigration was portrayed (1) as an issue that generated conflict among different political and social groups, (2) through stereotypical portrayals of immigrants as a threat to public health and security, (3) as a mass of people in extreme conditions of exception, and (4) as a problem to almost every aspect of the Greek society: for tourism, trade, the economy or even Greece's relationship with the EU. A peace frame, conversely, was identified in around one fourth of all news stories. At the same time, findings lead us to conclusions that transcend the peace and conflict journalism dualism revealing five distinct subframes that provide a more nuanced understanding of the peace journalism concept; (1) a 'direct conflict subframe' enhancing division and dispute over immigration, (2) a 'journalism of conventions subframe' following well-established journalistic conventions with important consequences on the quality of information, (3) a 'journalism of values subframe' being closer to the traditional values of journalism, (4) a 'diversity journalism subframe', including all elements referring to a pro-immigrant approach, and (5) a 'positive peace subframe', closer to Galtung's notion of positive peace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism: by Adam Nagourney, New York, Crown, 2023, 563 pp.
- Author
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Pressman, Matthew
- Subjects
CONTEMPT (Attitude) ,JOURNALISM ,SCANDALS ,NEWSPAPERS ,BUSINESS planning - Abstract
"The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism" by Adam Nagourney is a comprehensive history of the New York Times from 1977 to 2017. Nagourney, a reporter for the Times, explores the paper's business strategies, journalistic missteps, and internal politics. The book highlights the Times' record on race, gender, and sexuality, revealing instances of discrimination and bias. It also delves into notable controversies, such as the Jayson Blair scandal and Judith Miller's reporting on the threat posed by Saddam Hussein. Additionally, Nagourney examines the Times' efforts to adapt to the digital age and the challenges it faced. Overall, the book provides a detailed and balanced account of the newspaper's history. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Reparación feminista de la memoria histórica. La producción periodística de Luisa Carnés.
- Author
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Mata-Núñez, Almudena
- Subjects
SPANISH Republic, 1931-1939 ,POLITICS & culture ,COLLECTIVE memory ,NEWSPAPERS ,ANONYMS & pseudonyms - Abstract
Copyright of Documentación de las Ciencias de la Información is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Just don't say feminism: Covering the domestic violence act in the women's pages of the Malaysian Malay-language press.
- Author
-
Randhawa, Sonia
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL discourse analysis , *FEMINISM , *DOMESTIC violence , *VIOLENCE against women , *MALAYSIANS , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *ORAL history - Abstract
The women's pages of a newspaper have often been dismissed as fluff, playing at most a subsidiary role, while the real news of a paper is in the malestream pages: the domestic news or leader pages. Yet historically, these pages are often key in constructing women, and men, politically, socially and economically; in terms of generating revenue within the paper; and in terms of how the paper constructs itself in relation to its readers. Further, they have been important in bringing women into newsrooms, and allowing them to construct themselves as journalists with specialist expertise and independence from the male editorial hierarchy. In Malaysia, however, the women's pages of the Malay-language press played a key role in the 1996 campaign for a Domestic Violence Act. Informed both by feminist critical discourse analysis and oral histories with female journalists working at the time, this article sheds light on the gendered nature of Malaysian newsrooms, with implications for how feminist media activists can negotiate feminist coverage, even in an environment hostile to feminism. There are further implications for the importance of understanding processes of both negotiation within newsrooms and identity formation as journalists, both of which impact upon the news produced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. ANATOMÍA DE LAS VISUALIZACIONES EN EL PERIODISMO DE DATOS: Los casos de España y Estados Unidos.
- Author
-
CÓRDOBA-CABÚS, ALBA and LÓPEZ-MARTÍN, ÁLVARO
- Subjects
CONTENT analysis ,DATA modeling ,DATA visualization ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,VISUALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Visual Review is the property of Eagora Science and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. « Aux armes, journaliste ». À la recherche du proto-reportage dans la guerre de 1870.
- Author
-
BOLZ, LISA and CHARBONNEAUX, JULIETTE
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISTS ,POSTURE ,NEWSROOMS - Abstract
Copyright of Sur le Journalisme, About Journalism, Sobre Jornalismo is the property of Sur le journalisme, About journalism, Sobre jornalismo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Proměny registrů české žurnalistiky 1995-2018.
- Author
-
Cvrček, Václav
- Subjects
TABLOID newspapers ,JOURNALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,EMPIRICAL research ,COHESION ,JOURNALISTIC ethics ,IMPLICIT attitudes - Abstract
This paper summarizes an empirical corpus-based study of tendencies in register characteristics of Czech broadsheet newspapers (Lidové noviny, Mladá fronta DNES, Právo, Hospodářské noviny) and their comparison with the major tabloid newspaper Blesk in the period from 1995 to 2018. Register characteristics of journalistic texts are determined by projecting their position on a general multidimensional model established by previous research. The results show that Czech journalism has witnessed a significant decrease in cohesion, a shift from general to more concrete/specific descriptions and from explicit attitude signalling to a more factual style. The results did not provide sufficient evidence to confirm previously formulated hypotheses suggesting "tabloidization" and "conversationalization" of broadsheets in the period under examination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Structural-semantic transformations of phraseological units in Russian and Slovak newspaper articles.
- Author
-
Spišiaková, Andrea
- Subjects
RUSSIAN language ,NEWSPAPERS ,SLAVIC languages ,PHRASEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper deals with one of the manifestations of current innovative processes in phraseology, i.e. structural-semantic transformations of phraseological units in Russian and Slovak newspaper articles. The aim of this paper is to present an overview of structural-semantic transformations followed by a comparative Russian-Slovak analysis of creative modifications from selected journalistic sources and to summarize certain national-specific features of phraseological transformations in the given languages. Structural-semantic transformations include a spectrum of various types of modifications that affect both the structural and semantic levels of phraseological units. They are popular among journalists because they are an effective means to attract the recipient's attention, to increase the overall expressiveness of the newspaper articles, and to add semantic richness and imagery to transformed phraseological units. We will focus on insertion, substitution of components, phraseological paronomasia, contamination, and phraseological ellipsis. Each type of transformation is distinguished by its characteristic features and fulfils different functions in journalistic style, which we aim to determine throughout the analysis. Incorrect (or inappropriate) transformations of phraseological units are included in the material as well, even though they are not so frequent in journalistic practice. Structural-semantic transformations of phraseological units are widely used in both analysed Slavic languages; however, they appear to be more productive and richer in the Russian language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
34. Connected Empires, Connected News: A Comparison between Early Modern Spanish and Dutch news books on Brazil's conquest.
- Author
-
Espejo-Cala, Carmen
- Subjects
RELIGIOUS differences ,IMPERIALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,COLONIES - Abstract
This paper analyzes the information that was disseminated in the Netherlands and Spain—and other territories connected to the latter such as Portugal and Flanders under Habsburg rule—about the taking by the Dutch of the city of San Salvador de Bahia in Brazil, and his subsequent recovery by a Spanish-Portuguese expedition (1624–1625). Despite the different communicative structures, these national journalisms shared professional strategies to inform about the conflicts that occurred in the distant Brazilian lands. Given the difficulty of informing promptly and truthfully, the discourse of the Dutch and Spanish newspapers about their colonies alternates between the information explosion and silence, depending on the alternation between victories and defeats in American territory. News was as connected as were the empires that controlled vast territories in Europe and America, despite the ideological and religious differences of the era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The dependence of election coverage on political institutions: Political competition and policy framing in Germany and the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
McMenamin, Iain, Courtney, Michael, Breen, Michael, and McNulty, Gemma
- Subjects
ELECTION coverage ,POLITICAL competition ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM - Abstract
Election coverage is often assumed to be different to everyday political coverage. We argue that this depends on political institutions. In majoritarian countries, where elections choose governments, election coverage should decisively move towards political competition and away from policy. In consensual countries, where coalitions are based on policy negotiations, there should be a less pronounced shift towards political competition and away from policy. To test this argument, we use an automatic coding system to study 0.9 billion words in Die Welt for 12 years and in the Financial Times for 30 years. The results support our institutional hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Naming and Blaming: Civic Shame and Slum Journalism in Late Nineteenth-Century and Early Twentieth-Century Manchester and Birmingham.
- Author
-
O'Reilly, Carole
- Subjects
SHAME ,SLUMS ,SOCIAL action ,JOURNALISM ,NINETEENTH century ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This study analyzes slum journalism in the British provincial press and reveals that it continued to be a major theme until well into the twentieth century. Instead of the rather moralizing reporting of the earlier nineteenth century, this journalism used the device of civic shame to pressurize local government into taking action on slums as a matter of public health. It examines the discourses that resulted from civic shame in two newspapers—the Manchester Guardian and the Birmingham Daily Gazette —and challenges the idea that interest in reporting local political matters decreased during this period. Civic shame is shown to work in two ways—offering detailed vignettes of aspects of slum life based on personal observation and showing (some) slum-dwellers as worthy of better living conditions, and blaming the local authority directly for failing to address the problem. In this way, later slum writing sought to appeal directly to the reader not just to impart facts but to stimulate empathy and to develop a desire for action. Such in-depth studies of a particular social issue sought to address the local authorities directly, to apportion blame and to use slum writing as a tool for social action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. La metáfora en el discurso político. Los artículos de Lluís Bassets como ejemplo.
- Author
-
Kamal, Wisam Saad and Abid, Abeer Hussein
- Subjects
METAPHOR ,ARMED Forces ,NEWSPAPERS ,DISCOURSE ,IDEOLOGY ,SPORTS - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of College of Languages is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Shaw's Letters to Newspapers.
- Author
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Reynolds, Jean
- Subjects
METRIC system ,NEWSPAPERS ,POSTMODERNISM (Literature) - Abstract
Between 1875 and 1950, Bernard Shaw sent frequent letters to British newspapers about a staggering range of topics—everything from international affairs to the metric system. Those letters entertained and enlightened (and sometimes shocked) the British public, who soon learned to look forward to an encounter with the fabled GBS when they sat down with their morning paper. Researchers already know that Shaw's letters are a treasure trove of resource material. In this article, the author suggests another use for them—as a tool for learning more about the language issues that hold so much interest for postmodern philosophers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. LA PRENSA AMARILLISTA Y LA PRENSA TRADICIONAL EN LA GUERRA HISPANO-ESTADOUNIDENSE (1898).
- Author
-
Mayochi, Santiago
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER circulation ,JOURNALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,EXPONENTS ,OBJECTIVITY ,OBJECTIVITY in journalism - Abstract
Copyright of Colección is the property of Pontificia Universidad Catolica Argentina and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Dezső Kosztolányi, Scarabocchi.
- Author
-
Nuzzo, Armando
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER sections, columns, etc. ,FICTION ,JOURNALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,POETRY (Literary form) ,ANTHOLOGIES - Abstract
Between 1905 and 1936 Dezső Kosztolányi wrote continuously for Hungarian newspapers and weeklies: fiction columns, chronicles, short stories, poems, translations, reviews, brief notes on aesthetics, linguistics, and literature. Journalism must be understood in a completely original sense, inevitably since most of Kosztolányi's famous novels were also published as serial novels in magazines and newspapers. The short stories are in keeping with Kosztolányi's aesthetic belief that reality is more unlikely than fiction: "Life is unlikely. Life is bold". In the few lines of the newspaper columns, the language is necessarily clear, the rhythm calculated, the conception resolute. Outside Hungary a little anthology in French was published in the early 2000s, but thousands of these superb short "tales" are available only in Hungarian. Italian readers will find in this paper five pieces translated for the first time into Italian. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
41. Journalism and Corruption in Chicago, 1912–1931.
- Author
-
Arnold-Forster, Tom
- Subjects
JOURNALISM & politics ,PROPAGANDA ,CORRUPTION ,JOURNALISM ,CAPITALIST societies ,PLACE marketing ,POLITICAL corruption ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
The publicity of journalism has long been central to anti-corruption politics in the United States. This article explores relations between journalism and corruption in early twentieth-century Chicago and shows how newspapers could be used by corrupt politicians to consolidate and even constitute their power. By examining the three-term mayoralty of William Hale 'Big Bill' Thompson, the article considers a range of media strategies, from press-baiting to propaganda and boosterism, that fuelled public controversies about press hypocrisy and limited journalism's anti-corruption potential. Thompson's Chicago sheds light on broader debates about the politics of journalism in capitalist societies with commercial media environments; it also helps illuminate wider histories of corruption in America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cross-bordering journalism: How intermediaries of change drive the adoption of new practices.
- Author
-
Heft, Annett and Baack, Stefan
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS ,JOURNALISM ,ADOPTION ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
This article examines the adoption of cross-border collaboration practices by introducing the concept of 'intermediaries of change': individual journalists who drive the adoption and gradual normalisation of pioneering cross-border practices. We ask how they implement cross-border practices, integrate them into existing working routines, and how this influences their working conditions using a case study on Europe's Far Right, a network of seven newspapers that investigated far-right parties ahead of the European Parliament election 2019. We found that the network expanded journalists' research capacity and entails a 'domino effect' since journalists gain experience and establish cross-national ties, which enable them to better establish follow-up collaborations. While this might help to normalize cross-border practices, organisational structures and contexts of transnational journalism shape the degree of participation by different network members. Moreover, we found that cross-border collaborations might foster precarious working conditions and competition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Television Debates as a TV Typology: Continuities and Changes in Televised Political Competition—The Case of the 2023 Pre-Election Debates in Greece.
- Author
-
Bourchas, Panagiotis Vasileios and Gioltzidou, Georgia
- Subjects
POLITICAL competition ,TELEVISION ,POLITICAL change ,POLITICAL communication ,POLITICAL knowledge ,TELEVISION programs - Abstract
In the USA, for the first time in the 1960s, and in a very systematic manner from 1976 onwards, pre-election debates (televised presidential debates) have become a fundamental and integral method of communication for political parties, as well as an institution of American democracy that contributes significantly to shaping a culture of public political dialogue at a relatively high level, through which citizens accumulate knowledge about political figures and their parties' positions within a very short period of time before the elections. In Greece, on the contrary, these television programs have not sparked significant interest to date. The subject of this study is the television debates in Greece, evaluated through a brief historical overview and commentary on their structure, culminating in the two televised confrontations that took place within a five-month period during two electoral contests in 2023. Firstly, the reactions to and reception of the two televised debates by citizens on platform X and, secondly, the commentary on the two debates by journalists, columnists, and renowned analysts, reveal the differing interests of both sides. The research results confirm that, in addition to the performance of politicians, citizens are also interested in the conditions and form in which these pre-election televised debates are staged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Detecting the Use of ChatGPT in University Newspapers by Analyzing Stylistic Differences with Machine Learning.
- Author
-
Kim, Min-Gyu and Desaire, Heather
- Subjects
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,CHATGPT ,LANGUAGE models ,NEWSPAPERS ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Large language models (LLMs) have the ability to generate text by stringing together words from their extensive training data. The leading AI text generation tool built on LLMs, ChatGPT, has quickly grown a vast user base since its release, but the domains in which it is being heavily leveraged are not yet known to the public. To understand how generative AI is reshaping print media and the extent to which it is being implemented already, methods to distinguish human-generated text from that generated by AI are required. Since college students have been early adopters of ChatGPT, we sought to study the presence of generative AI in newspaper articles written by collegiate journalists. To achieve this objective, an accurate AI detection model is needed. Herein, we analyzed university newspaper articles from different universities to determine whether ChatGPT was used to write or edit the news articles. We developed a detection model using classical machine learning and used the model to detect AI usage in the news articles. The detection model showcased a 93% accuracy in the training data and had a similar performance in the test set, demonstrating effectiveness in AI detection above existing state-of-the-art detection tools. Finally, the model was applied to the task of searching for generative AI usage in 2023, and we found that ChatGPT was not used to revise articles to any appreciable measure to write university news articles at the schools we studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Role of the Press in the Management of Catalonia's Independence Process: An Analysis of Conflict Framing.
- Author
-
Pérez-López, Eva and Pena, Daniel Martín
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *NEWSPAPERS , *SOCIAL types , *JOURNALISM , *MASS media - Abstract
This paper examines the prevailing conflict framings of national (El País and El Mundo) and Catalan (La Vanguardia and El Periódico de Cataluña) newspapers in response to the management of the regional independence conflict (2010-2014). For this, a new conflict framing typology was developed, based on level of substantivity. The study has verified that territorial origin affects, but does not determine, the media's definition of the conflict and its preference for specific territorial models. The alignment between parties and the media appears to be the variable that best explains the orientation (pro-independence, constitutionalist, or federalist) of each newspaper. We have also verified the media's action as a polarizing agent based on territorial model preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. El papel de la prensa en la gestación del proceso independentista de Cataluña: análisis desde los marcos del conflicto.
- Author
-
Pérez-López, Eva and Pena, Daniel Martín
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *NEWSPAPERS , *SOCIAL types , *MASS media , *JOURNALISM - Abstract
This paper examines the prevailing conflict framings of national (El País and El Mundo) and Catalan (La Vanguardia and El Periódico de Cataluña) newspapers in response to the management of the regional independence conflict (2010-2014). For this, a new conflict framing typology was developed, based on level of substantivity. The study has verified that territorial origin affects, but does not determine, the media's definition of the conflict and its preference for specific territorial models. The alignment between parties and the media appears to be the variable that best explains the orientation (pro-independence, constitutionalist, or federalist) of each newspaper. We have also verified the media's action as a polarizing agent based on territorial model preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Datafication of Newsrooms: A Study on Data Journalism Practices in a British Newspaper.
- Author
-
Kalender, Ahmet Buğra
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,NEWSROOMS ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
This study investigates the function of data journalism in a UK newsroom using Bourdieu's field theory. The collection of study data was conducted through in-depth interviews, utilising a qualitative research methodology. The data obtained revealed that data journalism, a sub-field of journalism, continues to develop in an interdisciplinary structure and creates a new type of habitus (data habitus) within the field of journalism. This study also shows that the data journalism team in the newspaper has moved from being niche to being established as one of the most active and effective main sections of the newsroom, and that data-driven journalism has the potential to influence other teams. Lastly, this study suggested that the newsroom is undergoing a process of datafication by indicating the newspaper's intention to develop data skills beyond the data journalism team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Looking at Africa with Lisbon Eyes: The 'wind of change' in the colonial press of Luanda.
- Author
-
Rocha, João Manuel
- Subjects
PORTUGUESE colonies ,PROCLAMATIONS ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Suddenly, in the summer of 1960, the map of Africa gained a new political outline, with the proclamation of nine independences. But the majority of Luanda's newspapers appeared not to see the 'wind of change' blowing through the continent. In its pages, the news of Africa would barely mention more than the crisis in one of its neighbours, the former Belgian Congo. The analysis of the news about the proclamation of independences leads us to formulate the hypothesis that the relative invisibility of the smooth transitions and the major emphasis given to turbulent situations in the continent contributed to value the Portuguese colonial model. Crossing the analysis with research made in archive, this article also contributes to the characterisation of the Angolan daily press on the eve of the Portuguese colonial war. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ali Ekber Dihhudâ ve Sürgünde Gazetecilik: İstanbul'da Suruş Gazetesi.
- Author
-
TOOLABI, Tooran
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *INTEGRITY , *JOURNALISM , *CONSTITUTIONALISM , *FLAME , *NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Focusing on the Sorush newspaper published in Istanbul as a case of Iranian journalism in exile, this paper seeks to shed light on one aspect of Persian journalism in the constitutional period. On the eve of the 1906 Constitutional Revolution, Persian journalism entered into a critical phase that flourished outside the country. Istanbul, Calcutta, Cairo and London were the centres where Iranian intellectuals developed their critical ideas through this modern media. Inspired by these ideas, the Constitutional Revolution prepared an unprecedented situation for Iranian journalists to develop their flourishing career inside the country. It was in this period that a distinguished constitutionalist and intellectual Ali Akbar Dehkhoda began his journalistic career. Together with Mirza Jahangir Khan Shirazi, he began to publish Sur-e Esrafil, which presented a straightforwardly critical voice against Qajar despotism. Yet the passing flame of political freedom died out by the restoration of despotism and forced Dehkhoda and some of his colleagues to leave their homeland. He first went to Switzerland and then to Istanbul, where he continued his career in exile and published a new Persian-language newspaper by the name of Sorush. An analysis of this short-lived newspaper allows us to identify three pivotal concerns in its pages: advocacy of constitutionalism, opposition to imperialism and defending Iran's independence and territorial integrity, and the last but not the least, reflecting on Iran's first experience in constitutionalism. Indeed, for Dehkhoda and his colleagues in Sorush of İstanbul, securing an independent and well-integrated Iran was the most critical issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
50. Kopeck Journalism as a Social Profession: Upward Mobility, Service, and the Civil Society Spectrum in Late Imperial Russia: 4th Contribution to the Forum: Journalism as a Profession in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union: New Questions and Approaches in Russian Press History
- Author
-
Cowan, Felix
- Abstract
Through case studies of five prominent journalists, editors, and publishers, this article explores journalism at late imperial Russia's kopeck newspapers. Exploring the lives and careers of journalists from wide-ranging backgrounds who shared a view of their work as both a business and a form of service to poor Russians, this article argues that kopeck journalists thought their profession combined entrepreneurship and upward mobility with activism and civic responsibility. The life stories and views of kopeck journalists reveal that civil society was not limited to small groups of educated middle-class Russians but rather included a wide range of actors and initiatives. Viewing these figures as members of late imperial Russian civil society also demonstrates that civil society activity could coexist with business concerns and operate within Russia's emerging free market, despite the critiques of contemporary observers who saw commercial and social goals as inherently contradictory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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