Join Books.org — it's free

Media - Theory & Philosophy
Living Ethics: Across Media Platforms by Michael Bugeja — book cover

Living Ethics: Across Media Platforms

by Michael Bugeja
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

In a seamlessly wired world of television, computers, and BlackBerrys, where does ethics fit in? To address that question, Living Ethics calls for a moral convergence to complement the technological one. Identifying principles that apply across media platforms, Michael Bugeja has created a thorough and well-researched work that avoids the prescriptive language used by many texts; instead, he encourages critical thinking through examples that build, challenge, and enhance readers' value systems.

While many ethics texts focus almost exclusively on journalistic ethics, this award-winning text (recipient of the 2009 Clifford G. Christians Award for Research in Media Ethics) emphasizes unifying principles that collapse and transcend the boundaries of a wide variety of media sources—including newspapers, magazines, radio, television, public relations, photojournalism, advertising, and other forms of traditional and online mass communication. As readers will discover, the circumstances of ethical issues may vary, but the moral processes used to resolve them are basically the same.

Resolutely practical, Living Ethics is written in a clear and cogent style that helps readers:

• Understand unifying principles from historical, philosophical, and political perspectives

• Grasp the utility of principles that engage audiences and clients while respecting the diverse cultures in an increasingly global media environment

• Explore moral convergence through the eyes of more than 100 practitioners at major newsrooms, agencies, and organizations

• Examine ethical issues visually through more than 20 photos and illustrations

• Develop a set of principles to guide their careers across a multitude of platforms

Synopsis

In a seamlessly wired world of television, computers, and BlackBerrys, where does ethics fit in? To address that question, Living Ethics calls for a moral convergence to complement the technological one. Identifying principles that apply across media platforms, Michael Bugeja has created a thorough and well-researched work that avoids the prescriptive language used by many texts; instead, he encourages critical thinking through examples that build, challenge, and enhance readers' value systems.

While many ethics texts focus almost exclusively on journalistic ethics, this award-winning text (recipient of the 2009 Clifford G. Christians Award for Research in Media Ethics) emphasizes unifying principles that collapse and transcend the boundaries of a wide variety of media sources—including newspapers, magazines, radio, television, public relations, photojournalism, advertising, and other forms of traditional and online mass communication. As readers will discover, the circumstances of ethical issues may vary, but the moral processes used to resolve them are basically the same.

Resolutely practical, Living Ethics is written in a clear and cogent style that helps readers:

• Understand unifying principles from historical, philosophical, and political perspectives

• Grasp the utility of principles that engage audiences and clients while respecting the diverse cultures in an increasingly global media environment

• Explore moral convergence through the eyes of more than 100 practitioners at major newsrooms, agencies, and organizations

• Examine ethical issues visually through more than 20 photos and illustrations

• Develop a set of principles to guide their careers across a multitude of platforms

About the Author, Michael Bugeja

Michael Bugeja is Professor and Director of the Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication at Iowa State University. The recipient of the 2009 Clifford G. Christians Award for Research in Media Ethics (for Living Ethics), Bugeja is the author of twenty books, including Interpersonal Divide: The Search for Community in a Technological Age (OUP, 2005).

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2007
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Pages
368
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780195188608

More by Michael Bugeja

Similar books