ABSTRACT

The Arab Spring, the Occupy Wall Street movement and the Haiti earthquake are only some of the recent examples of the power of new media to transform journalism. Some celebrate this power as a new cosmopolitanism that challenges the traditional boundaries of foreign reporting, yet others fear that the new media simply reproduce old power relations in new ways. It is this important controversy around the role of new media in shaping a cosmopolitan journalism that offers the starting point of this book.

By bringing together an impressive range of leading theorists in the field of journalism and media studies, this collection insightfully explores how Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube are taking the voice of ordinary citizens into the forefront of mainstream journalism and how, in so doing, they give shape to new public conceptions of authenticity and solidarity.

This collection is directed towards a readership of students and scholars in media and communications, digital and information studies, journalism, sociology as well as other social sciences that engage with the role of new media in shaping contemporary social life.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Studies.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Cosmopolitanism and the new news media

chapter |16 pages

Online Journalism and Civic Cosmopolitanism

Professional vs. participatory ideals

chapter |15 pages

Cosmopolitanism as Conformity and Contestation

The mainstream press and radical politics

chapter |14 pages

Situated, Embodied and Political

Expressions of citizen journalism

chapter |18 pages

Getting Closer?

Encounters of the national media with global images

chapter |11 pages

“The World Is Watching”

The mediatic structure of cosmopolitanism

chapter |17 pages

Journalists Witnessing Disaster

From the calculus of death to the injunction to care

chapter |18 pages

Humanitarian Campaigns in Social Media

Network architectures and polymedia events

chapter |17 pages

Re-Mediation, Inter-Mediation, Trans-Mediation

The cosmopolitan trajectories of convergent journalism