News Values from an Audience Perspective
Title | News Values from an Audience Perspective PDF eBook |
Author | Martina Temmerman |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 191 |
Release | 2020-12-11 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 3030450465 |
This book focuses on journalistic news values from an audience perspective. The audience influences what is deemed newsworthy by journalists, not only because journalists tell their stories with a specific audience in mind, but increasingly because the interaction of the audience with the news can be measured extensively in digital journalism and because members of the audience have a say in which stories will be told. The first section considers how thinking about news values has evolved over the last fifty years and puts news values in a broader perspective by looking at news consumers’ preferences in different countries worldwide. The second section analyses audience response, explaining how audience appreciation and ‘clicking’ behaviour informs headline choices and is measured by algorithms. Section three explores how audiences contribute to the creation of news content and discusses mainstream media’s practice of recycling audience contributions on their own social media channels.
News Values
Title | News Values PDF eBook |
Author | Jack Fuller |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 1996-04 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780226268798 |
Collection of essays in which the author, president and publisher of the Chicago Tribune, discusses what he understands to be the underlying public values a newspaper serves and the implications of those values.
News Values
Title | News Values PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Brighton |
Publisher | SAGE |
Pages | 217 |
Release | 2007-11-19 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1849202168 |
Written by two practitioner-academics (who between them have more than fifty years of news industry experience), News Values analyses the shape of the news industry - a world of rolling news and multimedia platforms, and a world where broadcast news is increasingly considered another element of show business. Detailed chapters include critiques of existing theories, close study of the newspaper, radio, television and internet news channels, plus informative chapters on the many factors that shape the news we read, watch and hear including the role of the citizen journalist, user-generated content, spin doctors, and the new wave of press barons. Further chapters provide detailed analysis of the way in which the same story is treated across different media channels, and how journalists and editors work to keep breathing new life into rolling news stories.
The Discourse of News Values
Title | The Discourse of News Values PDF eBook |
Author | Monika Bednarek |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2017 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 0190653949 |
The Discourse of News Values breaks new ground in multimodal news discourse, offering the first book-length treatment of the discursive analysis of news values and the construction of newsworthiness. The book explores how the news is "sold" (made newsworthy) to audiences through the semiotic resources of language and image, providing a new analytical framework which can be used by other researchers in their own subsequent studies.
News Values
Title | News Values PDF eBook |
Author | Jack Fuller |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780226268804 |
Collection of essays in which the author, president and publisher of the Chicago Tribune, discusses what he understands to be the underlying public values a newspaper serves and the implications of those values.
The Discourse of News Values
Title | The Discourse of News Values PDF eBook |
Author | Monika Bednarek |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2017-02-07 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 0190653957 |
The Discourse of News Values breaks new ground in news media research in offering the first book-length treatment of the discursive construction of news values through words and images. Monika Bednarek and Helen Caple combine in-depth theoretical discussion with detailed empirical analysis to introduce their innovative analytical framework: discursive news values analysis (DNVA). DNVA allows researchers to systematically investigate how reported events are "sold" to audiences as "news" (made newsworthy) through the semiotic resources of language and image. With an interdisciplinary and multi-methodological approach, The Discourse of News Values analyzes authentic news discourse (both language and images) from around the English-speaking world through three new case studies: one that analyzes newsworthiness around the topic of cycling/cyclists; another that analyzes news values in images disseminated by news media organizations via Facebook; and a third that focuses on news values in "most shared" news items. Introducing readers to the possibilities of both DNVA and corpus-assisted multimodal discourse analysis (CAMDA), The Discourse of News Values brings together corpus linguistics and multimodal discourse analysis in a stimulating and unique book for researchers in Linguistics, Semiotics, Critical Discourse Analysis and Media/Journalism Studies.
On Press
Title | On Press PDF eBook |
Author | Matthew Pressman |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2018 |
Genre | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS |
ISBN | 9780674916159 |
In the 1960s and 70s the American press forged a new set of values. Threatened with obsolescence by the proliferation of new competitors, pressured to rectify their treatment of minorities and women, denounced as biased by both the left and the right, the country's leading news organizations made fundamental changes. They shifted from simply reporting the news to analyzing it. They adopted a more adversarial approach to those in power. They continued to strive for objectivity, but they did so in a way that left many outside their newsrooms (and many on the inside) deeply dissatisfied. In many ways they became more liberal. Powerful institutions like the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times--the two newspapers this book scrutinizes--transformed themselves, with major ramifications for the rest of the news media and for the country as a whole. On Press shows how these changes occurred, why they persisted for three decades after the 1970s, and why the media is reassessing long-held values once again in the Trump era.--