Histories of Digital Journalism

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Actor network theory
algorithms
archiving
artificial intelligence
Audience analytics
audience metrics
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Category=GTC
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citizen journalism
comparative journalism studies
computation data
crisis era
crisis narrative
critical cultural studies
cultural change
Cultural construction
decolonising media history
digital journalism
digital journalism evolution case studies
digital sublime
digital technologies
Digital transition
digitality
digitisation
digitization
Disruption
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
field theory
generative AI
innovation
Institutionalism
journalism history
long-form journalism
media historiography
memory
New York Times
newsroom transformation
oral history
policy development
post-scarcity
power structures media
prosopography
socio-technical change
technological changes
technological utopianism
technology
weather reporting
workers' discourse

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032795072
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Building on the momentum of the recent “historical turn” in digital media and Internet studies, this volume explores how digital journalism has developed from a historical perspective. With contributions from established and emerging scholars from Europe, Asia, South and North America, the book investigates not only how established journalistic systems transformed in the early days of digital but how the structural, technological, and cultural changes induced by digitization have reconfigured the trajectory of journalism.

The book argues in support of three main claims. The first is that emphasis should be given to the plurality of histories instead of one single digital journalism history, thereby acknowledging the complexities, interactions of social relations, cultural traditions, power configurations, and technological changes that have shaped journalism and digitization. The second is the decentralization and decolonization of digital journalism histories. The third refers to the need to highlight and demonstrate the idea that the evolution of digital journalism should be viewed as the co-construction of the social and technological realms.

With theoretical and methodological reflections on historicizing digital journalism along with original case studies or comparative inquiries into the phenomena over the decades-long digital revolution of journalism, this volume will shape the nascent field of digital journalism history and start a global critical exchange of various approaches to and aspects of historicizing digital journalism. As such, it will interest scholars and students of digital journalism, journalism history, digital media, Internet studies, and technology studies.

Tamas Tofalvy is an associate professor at the Department of Sociology and Communication at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, where he is the head of the Digital Media MA Programme and the project leader of the Hungarian Online and Digital Media History (MODEM) project. Between 2013 and 2017, he was Secretary General at the Association of Hungarian Content Providers (MTE) and, between 2010 and 2014, co-founding chair of IASPM Hungary. In the period 2012–2013, he was a Fulbright fellow at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. His works have been published in academic journals such as New Media & Society, First Monday, Media History, and Internet Histories.

Igor Vobič is professor at the Department of Journalism at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, and Deputy Head at the Social Communication Research Centre at the same institution. His research interests encompass the material and discursive aspects of technological innovations in journalism with a focus on transformations of news-making, the societal roles of journalism, and journalistic identity and ideology. In the last decade, he has published in international journals with a good reputation in communication, media, and journalism research. His works have been published in academic journals such as Javnost–The Public, Journalism, Journalism Studies, Digital Journalism, and Journalism Practice.