Geographies of Journalism: The Imaginative Power of Place in Making Digital News (Disruptions)

Geographies of Journalism: The Imaginative Power of Place in Making Digital News (Disruptions)

by KristyHess (Author), RobertGutscheJr (Author), Robert Gutsche Jr (Author), Robert E. Gutsche Jr. (Author), Kristy Hess (Author), RobertE.GutscheJr. (Author)

Synopsis

Geographies of Journalism connects theoretical and practical discussions of the role of geotechnologies, social media, and boots-on-the-ground journalism in a digital age to underline the complications and challenges that place-making in the press brings to institutions and ideologies. By introducing and applying approaches to geography, cultural resistance, and power as it relates to discussions of space and place, this book takes a critical look at how online news media shapes perceptions of locales. Through verisimilitude, storytelling methods, and journalistic evidence shaped by sources and news processes, the press play a critical role in how audiences shape interpretations of social conditions here and there , and place responsibility for socio-political issues that appear in everyday life.

Issues of proximity, place, territory, news myth, placemaking, and power align in this book of innovative and new assessments of journalism in the digital age. This is a valuable resource for scholars across the fields of human geography, journalism, and mass media.

$71.09

Quantity

5 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 138
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 31 Jul 2018

ISBN 10: 1138554367
ISBN 13: 9781138554368

Author Bio
Robert E Gutsche, Jr. is Senior Lecturer in Critical Digital Media Practice at Lancaster University, UK. His scholarship surrounds place-making in news as imposing social control. He is an author and editor of several books, including The Trump Presidency, Journalism, and Democracy (2018). Kristy Hess is an academic of Journalism and Communications Studies at Deakin University, Australia. She is largely interested in researching the sustainability of local media in a digital era and its connection to place-making, boundary work, and power.