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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Epigraph
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. What Kind of Press Freedom Does Democracy Need?
The Idea of Democratic Autonomy
Free Speech and Democratic Autonomy
The Argument from Truth
The Argument from Democracy
A Structural View of the Press, Press Freedom, and an Affirmative First Amendment
The Institutional Press
U.S. Supreme Court Press Decisions
Protecting Publics against Censorship
Regulating Access to Information
Regulating Press Structures in Public Interests
The Democratic Value of Listening
Conclusion
3. How Has the Press Historically Made Its Freedom?
The Press as a Field
Bourdieu’s Field Theory
Bourdieu’s Journalistic Field
The New Institutionalist Press
Press Autonomy as Negotiated Separations and Dependencies
Autonomy through Institutionalized Objectivity
Autonomy through Organizational Routine and Ritual
Autonomy through Bracketing Publics
Conclusion
4. How Is Networked Press Freedom a Question of Infrastructure?
Broadcast Era Press Freedom
Computational Influences on Press Freedom
Social Media and Press Freedom
Press Freedom as Sociotechnical, Infrastructural Work
Conclusion
5. How Free Is the Networked Press?
Dimensions of Networked Press Freedom
Observation
Production
Alignments
Labor
Analytics
Timing
Security
Audiences
Revenue
Facts
Resemblances
Affect
Conclusion
6. Conclusion
Appendix: A Discussion of Method
References
Index
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