ISBN13: | 9780367701307 |
ISBN10: | 0367701308 |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | 130 pages |
Size: | 216x138 mm |
Weight: | 240 g |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 4 Illustrations, black & white; 4 Line drawings, black & white; 3 Tables, black & white |
694 |
Journalism Between Disruption and Resilience
GBP 19.99
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Following recent developments in digital technologies, financial crises and changes in audience preferences, this book addresses the critical challenges and disruptions facing the profession of journalism.
Following recent developments in digital technologies, financial crises, and changes in audience preferences, this book addresses the critical challenges and disruptions facing the profession of journalism: an arguably precarious industry suffering from employment insecurity, individualization, and loss of autonomy.
Drawing on research from the Norwegian and Nordic media landscape, Journalism Between Disruption and Resilience elaborates on how boundary struggles between journalism and other forms of content, such as marketing and public relations, have become blurred, while social distinctions within the profession are deepened and exacerbated by downsizing and cutbacks in newsrooms and their journalistic staffs. The impact of these developments on the institutional and democratic role of journalism in society is discussed alongside the tensions between professional autonomy and precarious work. Expanding upon several earlier research studies, grounded in the sociology of professions and freelance work, this book provides a new theoretical framework from which to addressjournalistic precarity and the role of journalism in society.
This is an insightful study for advanced students and researchers in the areas of professional journalism, journalism education, and media industries including marketing and public relations.
1. Journalism: between destruction and resilience, 2. Journalism as a profession and institution, 3. A shifting professional landscape, 4. High job satisfaction but a precarious future: the doubled-edged nature of freelancing, 5. At the other end of precarity: profiled columnists as branded goods, 6. Both change and stability