ISBN13: | 9781032755809 |
ISBN10: | 1032755806 |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 142 pages |
Size: | 216x138 mm |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 12 Tables, black & white |
700 |
Sociology of minorities
Regional studies
Media and communications industry
History of America
Media and communication science in general
Journalism
Sociology of minorities (charity campaign)
Regional studies (charity campaign)
Media and communications industry (charity campaign)
History of America (charity campaign)
Media and communication science in general (charity campaign)
Journalism (charity campaign)
History of Brazilian Journalism
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This book constitutes a first-of-its-kind synthesis of the development of journalism in Brazil, considering both its mediations with national social and political life and its relationships of influence and dependence on international economic centers.
This book constitutes a first-of-its-kind synthesis of the development of journalism in Brazil, considering both its mediations with national social and political life and its relationships of influence and dependence on international economic centers.
The author suggests that Brazilian journalism has so far known four phases: doctrinal political journalism, narrative literary journalism, industrial news journalism, and multimedia infotainment journalism. Devoting a chapter to each phase, Daros presents a critical map of the genesis and metamorphosis of journalistic practices in the country. The analysis goes beyond a mere study of national history to mark the points of connection between the Brazilian case and other geographic spaces, showing how the profession moved between two Western paradigms and was continually shaped by the economic, political, and cultural context from which it emerged and was inserted. The final part of the book reflects critically on the state of Brazilian journalism today, considering the new social media culture, the increasing focus on costs over quality of news products, and the failed social responsibility of the profession to inform national public opinion.
This study is an important touchstone for researchers of Brazilian and Latin American journalism and those interested in the ways in which the media shapes and is shaped by a country?s socio-political climate.
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Introduction
A critical theory of the history of journalism
Framework for the study of the Brazilian case
Chapter 2: Political Doctrinaire Journalism
A colony without periodical press
The first journal and exile journalism
Gazettes and the printing monopoly
Pasquinade after the end of censorship
Emergence of daily newspapers
Chapter 3: Informative Literary Journalism
Decline of the partisan and community press
Renewal of journalism through literary magazines
Expansion of the mainstream across the country
Birth of media chains and their barons
Rise of modern journalism amid authoritarianism
Chapter 4: Industrial News Journalism
The North American influence on Brazilian journalism
Mainstream and alternative press in the Military Dictatorship
Media conglomerates and the news industry
Establishment and predominance of broadcasting journalism
Specialization and professionalization of newsrooms
Chapter 3: Multimedia Content Journalism
Popular journalism and the new middle class
The digitization of the press and news websites
All-news broadcasting and media convergence
Professional and amateur in the context of crisis
Metamorphosis of contemporary journalism
Chapter 6: Closing Remarks
Index