ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies offers an unprecedented collection of essays addressing the key issues and debates shaping the field of Digital Journalism Studies today.

Across the last decade, journalism has undergone many changes, which have driven scholars to reassess its most fundamental questions, and in the face of digital change, to ask again: ‘Who is a journalist?’ and ‘What is journalism?’. This companion explores a developing scholarly agenda committed to understanding digital journalism and brings together the work of key scholars seeking to address key theoretical concerns and solve unique methodological riddles.

Compiled of 58 original essays from distinguished academics across the globe, this Companion draws together the work of those making sense of this fundamental reconceptualization of journalism, and assesses its impacts on journalism’s products, its practices, resources, and its relationship with audiences. It also outlines the challenge presented by studying digital journalism and, more importantly, offers a first set of answers.

This collection is the very first of its kind to attempt to distinguish this emerging field as a unique area of academic inquiry. Through identifying its core questions and presenting its fundamental debates, this Companion sets the agenda for years to come in defining this new field of study as Digital Journalism Studies, making it an essential point of reference for students and scholars of journalism.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Defining Digital Journalism Studies

part 1|72 pages

Conceptualizing digital journalism studies

chapter 3|9 pages

Digital Journalism Ethics

chapter 4|11 pages

The Digital Journalist

The journalistic field, boundaries, and disquieting change

chapter 5|9 pages

The Time(s) Of News Websites

chapter 6|11 pages

Digital Footage from Conflict Zones

The politics of authenticity

chapter 7|10 pages

Gatekeeping and Agenda-Setting

Extinct or extant in a digital era?

part 3|60 pages

Financial strategies for digital journalism

chapter 14|9 pages

Funding Digital Journalism

The challenges of consumers and the economic value of news

chapter 16|10 pages

Newspaper Paywalls And Corporate Revenues

A comparative study

chapter 18|9 pages

Crowdsourcing in Open Journalism

Benefits, challenges, and value creation

chapter 19|11 pages

Community and Hyperlocal Journalism

A ‘sustainable’ model?

part 4|58 pages

Digital journalism studies: Issues and debates

chapter 20|11 pages

Mobile News

The future of digital journalism

chapter 22|9 pages

Automated Journalism

A posthuman future for digital news?

chapter 23|9 pages

Citizen Journalism

Connections, contradictions, and conflicts

part 5|60 pages

Developing digital journalism practice

chapter 26|9 pages

Data, Algorithms, and Code

Implications for journalism practice in the digital age 1

chapter 27|9 pages

Self-Referential Practices in Journalism

Metacoverage and metasourcing

chapter 28|10 pages

Live Blogs, Sources, and Objectivity

The contradictions of real-time online reporting

chapter 29|9 pages

Follow The Click?

Journalistic autonomy and web analytics

part 6|62 pages

Digital journalism and audiences

chapter 32|10 pages

Making Audience Engagement Visible

Publics for journalism on social media platforms

chapter 33|10 pages

Constructing News with Audiences

A longitudinal study of CNN’s integration of participatory journalism

chapter 34|9 pages

Revisiting the Audience Turn in Journalism

How a user-based approach changes the meaning of clicks, transparency, and citizen participation

chapter 35|10 pages

Between Proximity and Distance

Including the audience in journalism (research)

part 7|62 pages

Digital journalism and social media

chapter 39|11 pages

Social Media and Journalism

Hybridity, convergence, changing relationship with the audience, and fragmentation

chapter 43|11 pages

The Solo Videojournalist as Social Storyteller

Capturing subjectivity and realism with a digital toolkit and editorial vision

part 8|62 pages

Digital journalism content

chapter 44|11 pages

Converged Media Content

Reshaping the ‘legacy’ of legacy media in the online scenario

chapter 45|10 pages

Newspapers and Reporting

Keystones of the journalistic field

chapter 46|9 pages

The New Kids On the Block

The pictures, text, time-shifted audio, and podcasts of digital radio journalism online

chapter 47|9 pages

Longform Narrative Journalism

“Snow Fall” and beyond

chapter 49|11 pages

Developments in Infographics

part 9|58 pages

Global digital journalism

chapter 50|9 pages

Social Media Transforming News

Increasing public accountability in China—within limits

chapter 52|9 pages

A Conundrum of Contras

The ‘Murdochization’ of Indian journalism in a digital age

chapter 53|9 pages

Data Trumps Intuition Every Time 1

Computational journalism and the digital transformation of punditry

chapter 55|11 pages

Newsroom Convergence

A comparative study of European public service broadcasting organizations in Scotland, Spain, Norway, and Flemish Belgium

part 10|22 pages

Future directions

chapter 56|11 pages

Whistleblowing in A Digital Age

Journalism after Manning and Snowden

chapter 58|6 pages

Epilogue: Digital Journalism

A golden age, a data-driven dream, a paradise for readers—or the proletarianization of a profession?