Product details:
ISBN13: | 9781789733648 |
ISBN10: | 1789733642 |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | 176 pages |
Size: | 198x129 mm |
Weight: | 199 g |
Language: | English |
77 |
Category:
All That's Not Fit to Print
Fake News and the Call to Action for Librarians and Information Professionals
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Date of Publication: 21 May 2019
Normal price:
Publisher's listprice:
GBP 44.99
GBP 44.99
Availability:
printed on demand
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Short description:
Fake news may have reached new notoriety since the 2016 US election, but it has been around a long time. In All That?s Not Fit to Print, Amy Affelt offers tools and techniques for spotting fake news and discusses best practices for finding high quality sources, information, and data.
Long description:
"Dewey Defeats Truman." "Hillary Clinton Adopts Alien Baby."
Discerning reliable, authoritative news and information has gotten much harder in this connected, technologically-driven era. Amy Affelt provides a useful and informative guide to navigating the challenges--and an important call to arms for librarians and information specialists to play a leading role in defending and advancing the importance of objective facts on behalf of all of us.
Fake news may have reached new notoriety since the 2016 US election, but it has been around a long time. Whether it was an error in judgment in a rush to publish election results in November, 1948, or a tabloid cover designed to incite an eye roll and a chuckle in June, 1993, fake news has permeated and influenced culture since the inception of the printed press. But now, when almost every press conference at the White House contains a declaration of the evils of "fake news", evaluating information integrity and quality is more important than ever.
In All That?s Not Fit to Print, Amy Affelt offers tools and techniques for spotting fake news and discusses best practices for finding high quality sources, information, and data. Including an analysis of the relationship between fake news and social media, and potential remedies for viral fake news, Affelt explores the future of the press and the skills that librarians will need, not only to navigate these murky waters, but also to lead information consumers in to that future.
For any librarian or information professional, or anyone who has ever felt overwhelmed by the struggle of determining the true from the false, this book is a fundamental guide to facing the tides of fake news.
Discerning reliable, authoritative news and information has gotten much harder in this connected, technologically-driven era. Amy Affelt provides a useful and informative guide to navigating the challenges--and an important call to arms for librarians and information specialists to play a leading role in defending and advancing the importance of objective facts on behalf of all of us.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1. Fake News: False Content in a Familiar Format
2. How We Got Here
3. Sharing is Not Caring: Fake News and Social Media
4. How To Spot Fake News
5. Fake News In The Field: Library Schools and Libraries
6. The Future of Fake News: The View From Here
Conclusion