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Tracking the ways in which journalism and memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each other, this fascinating collection brings together leading scholars in journalism and memory studies to investigate the complicated role that journalism plays in relation to the past.
Tracking the ways in which journalism and memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each other, this fascinating collection brings together leading scholars in journalism and memory studies to investigate the complicated role that journalism plays in relation to the past.
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Autorenporträt
Kari Andén-Papadopoulos, Stockholm University, Sweden Dan Berkowitz, University of Iowa, USA Matt Carlson, Saint Louis University, USA Jill A. Edy, University of Oklahoma, USA. Robert Hariman, Northwestern University, USA Andrew Hoskins, University of Glasgow, UK. Susana Kaiser, University of San Francisco, USA Carolyn Kitch, Temple University, USA Carolyne Lee, University of Melbourne, Australia John Louis Lucaites, Indiana University, USA Oren Meyers, University of Haifa, Israel Motti Neiger, Netanya Academic College, Israel Jeffrey Olick, University of Virginia, USA Anna Reading, Kings College, University of London, UK Michael Schudson, Columbia University, USA Barry Schwartz, University of Georgia, USA Ingrid Volkmer, University of Melbourne, Australia Eyal Zandberg, Netanya Academic College, Israel Barbie Zelizer, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures List of Tables Notes on Contributors PART I: TRAJECTORIES OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY 1. Reflections on the Underdeveloped Relations between Journalism and Memory Studies; Jeffrey Olick 2. Memory as Foreground, Journalism as Background; Barbie Zelizer 3. Shifting the Politics of Memory: Mnemonic Trajectories in a Global Public Terrain; Ingrid Volkmer and Carolyne Lee, 4. Collective Memory in a Post-Broadcast World; Jill Edy PART II: DOMAINS OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY Journalism and Narrative Memory 5. Journalism as a Vehicle of Non-Commemorative Cultural Memory; Michael Schudson 6. Counting time: Journalism and the Temporal Resource; Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt 7. Reversed memory: Commemorating the Past Through Coverage of the Present; Motti Neiger, Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers Journalism and Visual Memory 8. Hands and Feet: Photojournalism, the Fragmented Body Politic, and Collective Memory; Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites 9. Journalism, Memory and the 'Crowd-Sourced Video Revolution'; Kari Andén-Papadopoulos 10. The Journalist as Memory Assembler: Non-Memory, The War on Terror and The Shooting of Osama Bin Laden; Anna Reading 11. A New Memory of War; Andrew Hoskins Journalism and Institutional Memory 12. The Late News: Memory Work as Boundary Work in the Commemoration of Television Journalists; Matt Carlson and Dan Berkowitz 13. Conventions and Cultures, 1863-2013: The Gettysburg Address in the Mind of American Journalism; Barry Schwartz 14. Historical Authority and the 'Potent Journalistic Reputation': A Longer View of Legacy-Making in American News Media; Carolyn Kitch 15. Argentinean Torturers on Trial: How Are Journalists Covering the Hearings' Memory Work?; Susana Kaiser
List of Figures List of Tables Notes on Contributors PART I: TRAJECTORIES OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY 1. Reflections on the Underdeveloped Relations between Journalism and Memory Studies; Jeffrey Olick 2. Memory as Foreground, Journalism as Background; Barbie Zelizer 3. Shifting the Politics of Memory: Mnemonic Trajectories in a Global Public Terrain; Ingrid Volkmer and Carolyne Lee, 4. Collective Memory in a Post-Broadcast World; Jill Edy PART II: DOMAINS OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY Journalism and Narrative Memory 5. Journalism as a Vehicle of Non-Commemorative Cultural Memory; Michael Schudson 6. Counting time: Journalism and the Temporal Resource; Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt 7. Reversed memory: Commemorating the Past Through Coverage of the Present; Motti Neiger, Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers Journalism and Visual Memory 8. Hands and Feet: Photojournalism, the Fragmented Body Politic, and Collective Memory; Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites 9. Journalism, Memory and the 'Crowd-Sourced Video Revolution'; Kari Andén-Papadopoulos 10. The Journalist as Memory Assembler: Non-Memory, The War on Terror and The Shooting of Osama Bin Laden; Anna Reading 11. A New Memory of War; Andrew Hoskins Journalism and Institutional Memory 12. The Late News: Memory Work as Boundary Work in the Commemoration of Television Journalists; Matt Carlson and Dan Berkowitz 13. Conventions and Cultures, 1863-2013: The Gettysburg Address in the Mind of American Journalism; Barry Schwartz 14. Historical Authority and the 'Potent Journalistic Reputation': A Longer View of Legacy-Making in American News Media; Carolyn Kitch 15. Argentinean Torturers on Trial: How Are Journalists Covering the Hearings' Memory Work?; Susana Kaiser
Rezensionen
'Here is a pioneering whole about journalism and memory relationships: two subjects seemingly contradictory and incompatible. This book will be a standard reference work.' - Pierre Nora
'Journalism and Memory sets the agenda for new research in memory studies. With a stellar cast of contributors, it renders visible the decisive role that journalism plays in the making of collective memory. So far, memory studies has been surprisingly unaware of the workings of journalism as both an agent and reservoir of collective memory. Journalism and Memory puts the record of memory straight. It is my memory-book of the year.' - Astrid Erll, Professor of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures at Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany, and author of Memory in Culture (2011).
'A major contribution to the fields of memory studies and journalism studies, this collection of essays by key scholars in these fields investigates the primary role played by journalism in the production of cultural memory. With perspectives from around the globe, these essays examine not only why journalism has been a neglected site of inquiry in memory studies but offer an array of compelling examples of journalism's role as one of collective memory's 'first drafts'.' Marita Sturken, New York University, USA
'Journalism and Memory brings together an outstanding collection of scholars from many fields. It is the best starting point for anyone interested in the memory work of journalism, and an important addition to both memory and journalism studies. If you are interested in how news media construct an ever-evolving collective memory, this book is required reading.' - John Nerone, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA …mehr
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