ABSTRACT

This book reviews recent studies into smartphones and the news, and argues that the greatest impact on news of the smartphone as a dominant technological artefact is to shift it away from an authoritative, fixed ‘first draft of history’ to become a fluid, flexible stream of information from which each individual constructs their own meaning.

The news has taken on a new life, fragmented by five billion smartphones, disrupting not just an industry but also the significance of the news in societies worldwide. This book considers how the smartphone has changed the production of journalism through contributions from the general public, the dominance of visual over textual media, the shift towards brevity, the challenges of verification, and the possibilities offered by the multi-skilled mobile journalist, or MoJo. The book looks at the manner in which news is promoted and distributed via smartphones, specifically its place on social media. Finally, it considers how news-on-smartphones fits into consumers’ lives, and how their use of the smartphone to access news is impacting back on its production.

This is an insightful research text for journalism students and scholars with an interest in digital journalism, new media, and the intersection between technology and communication.

chapter 1|8 pages

Turn on your smartphone

chapter 2|8 pages

Going mobile

chapter 3|7 pages

Sources and objectivity

chapter 4|5 pages

MoJos on the move

chapter 5|7 pages

We the newspeople

chapter 6|8 pages

Something to shout about

chapter 7|7 pages

Twitter

chapter 8|9 pages

News pursues me

chapter 9|9 pages

Freedom to choose – or not to choose

chapter 10|7 pages

Snacking in the interstices of life

chapter 11|6 pages

A time and a place for news

chapter 12|7 pages

Still moving