News Journalism and Twitter

News Journalism and Twitter

Disruption, Adaption and Normalisation

Dagoula, Chrysi

Taylor & Francis Ltd

10/2024

126

Mole

9781032139807

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

Descrição não disponível.
List of figures

List of tables

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter 1. The two dominant views of Twitter and news journalism

1.1. Twitter as enabling and benefiting news journalism

1.2. Twitter as distorting news journalism

Chapter 2. Punctuated equilibrium: disruption, adaption and normalisation

2.1. The institution of news journalism and punctuated equilibrium

2.2. Disruption as a commonplace event

Chapter 3. What news journalists say about their use of Twitter

3.1. Qualitative approach: research interviews

3.2. Questionnaire themes concerning the evolutionary impact of Twitter on news journalism

3.3 Journalists' evaluation of Twitter's costs and benefits to news journalism

Chapter 4. From disruption to normalisation: journalists' accounts on Twitter (2009-2021)

4.1. An account of the participants

4.2. The participants' first Tweets: 2009-2011

4.3. The 'presentation of self': how the participants chose to display their biographical information

4.4. Account core features: account activity, use of hashtags and mentions and formatting tweets and textual choices

Chapter 5. An evaluation of the direct and indirect costs and benefits of Twitter to news journalism

References
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Comparative Media;Greek Media;UK Media;New Media;Journalists;Journalist Perceptions;Social Media;Twitter;Digital Media;Journalism;Affect News Production;UK Medium;Journalist's Tweets;Public Engagement;Journalistic Ecosystem;News Journalism;Twitter's Impact;News Journalists;Punctuated Equilibrium;Blue Tick;Short Term Disruption;Twitter's Conventions;Functionalist Language;Public Infrastructure;Mobile Phone Text Messaging;Information Disorder;Free Speech Justifications;Social Networking Space;Twitter Users;Town Hall;Textual Choices;CNN Effect;Participant Journalists;Aggregate Reactions