The speed of contemporary journalism has accelerated to the point where accuracy, insight and ethics are compromised. Slow journalism has emerged as a reaction and critique - a new practice for new times. This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Practice and Digital Journalism.
The speed of contemporary journalism has accelerated to the point where accuracy, insight and ethics are compromised. Slow journalism has emerged as a reaction and critique - a new practice for new times. This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Practice and Digital Journalism.
Megan Le Masurier is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Media and Communications, University of Sydney, Australia.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction - Slow Journalism: An introduction to a new research paradigm 1. On not going too fast with Slow Journalism 2. Reclaiming slowness in journalism: Critique, complexity and difference 3. Lessening the construction of otherness: A slow ethics of journalism 4. The Temporal Tipping Point: Regimentation, representation and reorientation in ethnographic journalism 5. When Slow News is Good News: Book-length journalism's role in extending and enlarging daily news 6. Slow Journalism in Spain: New magazine startups and the paradigmatic case of Jot Down 7. Is there a future for Slow Journalism? The perspective of younger users 8. Editing, fast and slow 9. Networked news time: How slow - or fast - do publics need news to be? 10. Multimedia, Slow Journalism as process, and the possibility of proper time 11. The Sochi Project: Slow journalism within the transmedia space 12. Slowing down media coverage on the US-Mexico border: News as sociological critique in Borderland 13. Resiliency in Recovery: Slow journalism as public accountability in post-Katrina New Orleans 14. Time to Engage: De Correspondent's redefinition of journalistic quality 15. "Make Every Frame Count": The practice of slow photojournalism and the work of David Burnett 16. The Business of Slow Journalism: Deep storytelling's alternative economies 17. Slow Journalism and the Out of Eden Walk
Introduction - Slow Journalism: An introduction to a new research paradigm 1. On not going too fast with Slow Journalism 2. Reclaiming slowness in journalism: Critique, complexity and difference 3. Lessening the construction of otherness: A slow ethics of journalism 4. The Temporal Tipping Point: Regimentation, representation and reorientation in ethnographic journalism 5. When Slow News is Good News: Book-length journalism's role in extending and enlarging daily news 6. Slow Journalism in Spain: New magazine startups and the paradigmatic case of Jot Down 7. Is there a future for Slow Journalism? The perspective of younger users 8. Editing, fast and slow 9. Networked news time: How slow - or fast - do publics need news to be? 10. Multimedia, Slow Journalism as process, and the possibility of proper time 11. The Sochi Project: Slow journalism within the transmedia space 12. Slowing down media coverage on the US-Mexico border: News as sociological critique in Borderland 13. Resiliency in Recovery: Slow journalism as public accountability in post-Katrina New Orleans 14. Time to Engage: De Correspondent's redefinition of journalistic quality 15. "Make Every Frame Count": The practice of slow photojournalism and the work of David Burnett 16. The Business of Slow Journalism: Deep storytelling's alternative economies 17. Slow Journalism and the Out of Eden Walk
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