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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Acknowledgments
1 Imagining Journalism
Beginnings
2 Twelve Metaphors for Journalism
Thinking about Journalism
How Journalists Talk about Journalism
How Scholars Talk about Journalism
The Usefulness of Metaphors
Section I Key Tensions in Journalism
Cues for Considering Key Tensions in Journalism: With Jennifer Henrichsen and Natacha Yazbeck
3 “Eyewitnessing” as a Journalistic Key Word: Report, Role, Technology and Aura
Key Words as Markers of Culture
Eyewitnessing as a Journalistic Key Word
First-Stage Eyewitnessing – Report
Second-Stage Eyewitnessing – Report/Role
Third-Stage Eyewitnessing – Report/Role/Technology
Fourth-Stage Eyewitnessing – Report/Role/Technology/Aura
From “Having Been There” to “Not Being There”
4 How the Shelf Life of Democracy in Journalism Scholarship Hampers Coverage of the Refugee Crisis
The Shelf Life of Ideas
Shelf Life and the Democracy/Journalism Nexus
How Journalism Became Necessary for Democracy
Why Democracy is Not Central for Journalism
The Refugee Crisis and the Journalism/Democracy Link
Refugees, Democracy and Journalism
The Immunity of Democracy’s Shelf Life
Enabling Retirement
5 Practice, Ethics, Scandal, Terror
The Problem of Ethics
Temporality and Ethics
Geography and Ethics
Institutional Culture and Ethics
Technology and Ethics
On the Impossibility of Journalism Ethics
Section II Disciplinary Matters
Cues for Considering Disciplinary Matters: With Jennifer Henrichsen and Natacha Yazbeck
6 Journalism and the Academy, Revisited
The Shape of Journalism and Its Study
Interpretive Communities and Journalism’s Study
Blended Inquiry and Future Correctives
7 Journalism Still in the Service of Communication
Reconsidering the Establishment of the Field of Communication
How Journalism Helped to Establish the Field of Communication
Where Did Journalism Go Over Time?
How Journalism Challenges Assumptions about Communication
Journalism @ the Center of Communication
8 On Journalism and Cultural Studies: When Facts, Truth and Reality Are God-Terms
On Journalism from a Cultural Perspective
Cultural Studies and Journalism
On the Future of Journalism and Cultural Studies
Section III New Ways of Thinking About Journalistic Practice
Cues for Considering New Ways of Thinking About Journalistic Practice: With Jennifer Henrichsen and Natacha Yazbeck
9 A Return to Journalists as Interpretive Communities
The Dominant Frame: Journalists as Professionals
The Alternative Frame: Journalists as an Interpretive Community
Local Mode of Interpretation
Durational Mode of Interpretation
Watergate and McCarthyism
Discourse and the Interpretive Community
10 Reflecting on the Culture of Journalism
Culture as a Construct
What is the Culture of Journalism?
Who Inhabits the Culture of Journalism?
What is the Culture of Journalism For?
The Culture of Journalism
11 When 21st-Century War and Conflict Are Reduced to a Photograph
Why Do War and Conflict Turn to the Visual?
Visualizing Twenty-first Century Combat
When War and Conflict Are Reduced to a Photograph
Endings
12 Thinking Temporally about Journalism’s Future
Predicting the Future
On Knowledge Transfer and Time
Tools of Temporal Engagement
The Past and Reflexivity
The Present and Transparency
The Future and Proactivity
Toward Journalism’s Future
References
Index
End User License Agreement
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