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Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere New edition [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 394 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 660 g
  • Sērija : Digital Formations 113
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433133210
  • ISBN-13: 9781433133213
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 394 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 660 g
  • Sērija : Digital Formations 113
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433133210
  • ISBN-13: 9781433133213
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere documents an emerging news media environment that is characterised by an increasingly networked and social structure. In this environment, professional journalists and non-professional news users alike are increasingly cast in the role of gatewatcher and news curator, and sometimes accept these roles with considerable enthusiasm. A growing part of their everyday activities takes place within the spaces operated by the major social media providers, where platform features outside of their control affect how they can post, find, access, share, curate, and otherwise engage with news, rumours, analysis, comments, opinion, and related forms of information.

If in the current social media environment the majority of users are engaged in sharing news; if the networked structure of these platforms means that users observe and learn from each other’s sharing practices; if these practices result in the potential for widespread serendipitous news discovery; and if such news discovery is now overtaking search engines as the major driver of traffic to news sites—then gatewatching and news curation are no longer practiced only by citizen journalists, and it becomes important to fully understand the typical motivations, practices, and consequences of habitual news sharing through social media platforms.

Professional journalism and news media have yet to fully come to terms with these changes. The first wave of citizen media was normalised into professional journalistic practices—but this book argues that what we are observing in the present context instead is the normalisation of professional journalism into social media.



Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere documents an emerging news media environment that is characterised by a more and more networked and social structure.

Recenzijas

Gatewatching and News Curation is an intelligent, insightful, and indispensable intervention in the debate over social medias impact on journalism. Axel Bruns masterfully charts the rise of new social media infrastructures, the spread of novel audience practises, and the corollary actions and reactions of journalists. He adroitly navigates conflicting trends and tensions that both challenge journalism and point to fresh directions, addressing questions over what journalism is, how it operates and to what purpose. Gatewatching and News Curation is a deep dive into the media at a time when audiences and journalists swim in an ocean of information, with news swirling around at all times of the day, in all shapes and sizes, via all sorts of intermediaries and devices.Alfred Hermida, University of British Columbia Axel Bruns brilliantly captures an under-researched feature of the unfinished communications revolution of our time: the decline of gatekeeping media that once decided for millions of people what was newsworthy, and what was the truth, and the rise of networks of gatewatching platforms that make, discover, share, and dispute news about our world. This is an elegant and uplifting book by a distinguished media scholar whose wise observations and lively conjectures deserve to be widely known, and widely appreciated.John Keane, University of Sydney; Author of The Life and Death of Democracy

Acknowledgments ix
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(18)
Coming Up in the News
3(5)
Platforms of the Social News Media Network
8(4)
A Study in Precarity
12(7)
Chapter 2 From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: The First Wave of Citizen Media
19(50)
Key Elements of Citizen Journalism
24(8)
Gatewatching, Not Gatekeeping
26(2)
Collaborative Online News Production
28(2)
Unfinished News
30(2)
The First Wave of Citizen Media
32(3)
Parasites or Para-Journalists? Citizen Journalism and the Mainstream Media
35(20)
Embracing the People Formerly Known as the Audience
36(5)
Protecting the Journalistic Profession through Boundary Work
41(7)
The Gradual Normalisation of Citizen Journalism Elements
48(7)
Beyond the First Wave of Citizen Media
55(4)
Enter Social Media
59(10)
Chapter 3 #BREAKING: Social News Curation during Acute Events
69(46)
News Breaks on Twitter
74(5)
The Dynamics of Breaking News on Social Media
79(25)
Ad Hoc Emergence
80(2)
Selective Repetition through Gatewatching
82(5)
Gatewatching as a Collective and Collaborative Practice
87(4)
The Structuration of Social News Curation Communities
91(4)
Social News Curation, Social News Framing
95(3)
A Cycle of Interaction between Journalistic Reporting and Social Curation
98(6)
Reintermediating the News: A First Draft of the Present
104(11)
Chapter 4 Random Acts of Gatewatching: Everyday Newssharing Practices
115(60)
From Acute Events to Everyday Engagement
119(4)
Random, Serendipitous, Habitual News Engagement
123(4)
Newssharing
127(15)
Motivations for Newssharing
128(3)
Newssharing Practices
131(3)
Networks of Newssharing
134(3)
Newssharing as Performance
137(3)
Newssharing as a Demotic Practice
140(2)
From Demotic Newssharing to Habitual News Curation
142(9)
Personal Curation
142(2)
Social Recommendations
144(2)
Topical Clustering
146(3)
The Emergence of Niche Authorities
149(2)
Beyond the Political
151(4)
Demotic. Democratic?
155(4)
Industry Responses to Habitual Newssharing
159(16)
Chapter 5 Meet the Audience: How Journalists Adapt to Social Media
175(42)
Towards the Normalisation of Social Media
179(7)
Journalistic Uses of Social Media
186(19)
Promoting Stories
188(1)
Curating Content
189(3)
Personal Branding
192(3)
Connecting with Sources
195(4)
Monitoring Developments
199(3)
Engaging with Audiences
202(3)
Social Media and Journalistic Disclosure Transparency
205(12)
Chapter 6 Management and Metrics: The News Industry and Social Media
217(54)
Standardising Social Media Activities
219(3)
Addressing Personal Branding
222(2)
Measuring Audience Engagement
224(3)
Shaping News Content
227(3)
From Metrics of Popularity to the Populism of Metrics?
230(6)
Atomising the News, Deliberately
236(4)
Mobile News Users, Mobile News Workers
240(3)
The Normalisation of Journalism
243(4)
Social Media as Tertiary Spaces for the News
247(4)
Rethinking Journalistic Ideals
251(5)
Networking the Spaces for Journalism
256(4)
Platform Power
260(11)
Chapter 7 Hybrid News Coverage: Liveblogs
271(38)
Liveblogs as a Hybrid Format
275(4)
From Social News Curation to Curated Social Media Content
279(3)
Liveblogs and Their Audiences
282(7)
Between Mainstream and Social Media
289(5)
Liveblogs as Public Journalism?
294(3)
Liveblogs and Beyond
297(4)
Situating Liveblogs in the News Ecology
301(8)
Chapter 8 New(s) Publics in the Public Sphere
309(40)
Social Media and Everyday Public Debate
314(3)
Social Media as Third Spaces in a Hybrid Media System
317(3)
Beyond `the' Public Sphere
320(5)
Towards Filter Bubbles and Echo Chambers?
325(5)
Understanding Social Media Publics
330(5)
Studying the Interplay of Publics
335(5)
A New Agenda for Public Sphere Research
340(9)
Chapter 9 Conclusion: A Social News Media Network
349(28)
The Journalist as Gatekeeper, Gatewatcher, and Curator
351(2)
Algorithmically and Communally Curated Flows of News
353(5)
News and Its Users
358(5)
An Industry in Transformation
363(6)
Towards a Social News Media Network
369(8)
Index 377
Axel Bruns is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow and Professor in the Digital Media Research Centre at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia. His work focuses on user engagement in social media and its implications for our understanding of the contemporary public sphere.