Histories of Digital Journalism - Tofalvy, Tamas; Vobič, Igor; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Histories of Digital Journalism

The Interplay of Technology, Society and Culture
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

Building on the momentum of the recent ?historical turn? in digital media and Internet studies, this volume explores how digital journalism has developed from a historical perspective. 


Long description:

Building on the momentum of the recent ?historical turn? in digital media and Internet studies, this volume explores how digital journalism has developed from a historical perspective. With contributions from established and emerging scholars from Europe, Asia, South and North America, the book investigates not only how established journalistic systems transformed in the early days of digital but how the structural, technological, and cultural changes induced by digitization have reconfigured the trajectory of journalism.


The book argues in support of three main claims. The first is that emphasis should be given to the plurality of histories instead of one single digital journalism history, thereby acknowledging the complexities, interactions of social relations, cultural traditions, power configurations, and technological changes that have shaped journalism and digitization. The second is the decentralization and decolonization of digital journalism histories. The third refers to the need to highlight and demonstrate the idea that the evolution of digital journalism should be viewed as the co-construction of the social and technological realms.


With theoretical and methodological reflections on historicizing digital journalism along with original case studies or comparative inquiries into the phenomena over the decades-long digital revolution of journalism, this volume will shape the nascent field of digital journalism history and start a global critical exchange of various approaches to and aspects of historicizing digital journalism. As such, it will interest scholars and students of digital journalism, journalism history, digital media, Internet studies, and technology studies.



?In this theoretically rich work, Tamas Tofalvy and Igor Vobič provide an essential guide to not just describe, but also understand the neither linear nor inevitable historical transformation of journalism around the world.?


Mark Deuze, Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam 


?The field of journalism studies has boomed in the last decades, especially after the digital turn. There is a need for historicizing the field and reflecting on old and new practices, as this book does. It is a great exercise in reconstructing the intellectual history of journalism, theorizing and periodizing what is new and old in journalism, de-westernizing changes (and continuities) in the sector. A must-read for media and journalism historians, but also for scholars in journalism who don?t want to fall into a newness ideology.?


Gabriele Balbi, Full Professor in Media Studies, USI Universit? della Svizzera italiana (Switzerland), author of The Digital Revolution. A Short History of an Ideology (2023).  


"Histories of Digital Journalism provides a much-needed corrective to the scarcity of historical perspectives in journalism studies. A truly global collection, the book offers a rich tapestry of case studies, methodological and theoretical approaches, and geographical contexts for understanding the profound transformations wrought by the digital era."


Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Professor, School of Journalism, Media and Culture, Cardiff University, UK.


 

Table of Contents:

INTRODUCTION


Chapter 1: Why historicize digital Journalism? Disentangling the relationship between journalism, technology, and history


PART 1: Theories and methods of digital journalism histories


Chapter 2: Conceptualizing change in digital journalism: Three key theories in comparison 


Chapter 3: "I tape therefore I am": Excavating digital journalism?s lieux de memoire through oral history


Chapter 4: Bridging boundary work theory and the social construction of technology from a historical perspective: On the construction of socio-technical boundaries of digital journalism


PART 2: Professionalism and meta-discourses of digital journalism


Chapter 5: The short history of naming journalism in the digital era


Chapter 6: Inquiry into the digital sublime: Interrogating the major narratives concerning new technologies in journalism research between 1980 and 2013


Chapter 7: Digital disruption or union neutralization? A diachronic history of tensions between the figures of the professional and the worker in the history of a Canadian newspaper


Chapter 8: ?A whiff of panic?: How journalists in the UK and Germany articulated their professional beliefs and identity in crisis times


Chapter 9: From bytes to bylines: A history of AI in journalism practices


PART 3: Cultures of data, organizations, and journalism practices 


Chapter 10: From audience clicks to time spent: Evolution of audience analytics and metrics in Norwegian newsrooms


Chapter 11: No crisis but cooperation: Construction of online newspapers in Nepal


Chapter 12: A singular public model: A history of online journalism through DiarideBarcelona.com


Chapter 13: Digital journalism in Brazil: A history of diversity in products and research


Chapter 14: History of digital journalism in Egypt: Between institutionalism and individualism


CODA


Chapter 15: Historiography and digital journalism