ABSTRACT

This edited collection brings together a range of contemporary expertise to discuss the development and impact of tabloid news around the world.

In thirteen chapters, Global Tabloid covers tabloid developments in Asia, Africa, the Americas, Australia, and both Eastern and Western Europe. It presents innovative research from eighteen expert contributors and editors who explore tabloidization as a phenomenon, and tabloids as a news form. With an awareness of historical dynamics where tabloids played a role in national news media systems, it brings the debates around tabloids as a cultural force up to date. The book addresses important questions about the contemporary nature of popular culture, the challenges it faces in the digital era, and its impact on a political world dominated by tabloid values. Going beyond national borders to consider global developments, the editors and contributors explore how the tabloids have permeated media culture more generally and how they are adapting to an increasingly digitalized media sphere.   

This internationally focused critical study is a valuable resource for students and researchers in journalism, media, and cultural studies.

chapter 1|15 pages

Tabloid culture

Parameters and debates

chapter 2|18 pages

Digital impacts on the tabloid sphere

Blurring and diffusion of a popular form and its power

chapter 4|19 pages

Is Facebook driving tabloidization?

A cross-channel comparison of two German newspapers

chapter 5|18 pages

Tabloids in Zimbabwe

A moral-ethical research agenda

chapter 6|17 pages

Trivializing entertainment news in India

Elements of tabloidization in the news coverage of Bollywood celebrities

chapter 8|12 pages

Recent shifts in the Australian tabloid landscape

Fissures and new formations

chapter 9|16 pages

The post-communist “hybrid” tabloid

Between the serious and the “yellow”

chapter 10|14 pages

From baby bumps to border walls

Celebrity gossip magazines and the post-truth politic

chapter 11|16 pages

Dispatches from la Crónica roja

Why sensationalism and crime still matter in the new Latin America media ecology

chapter 12|15 pages

The rise and fall of tabloid journalism in post-Mao China

Ideology, the market, and the new media revolution