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News Production by Sarah Niblock — book cover

News Production

by Sarah Niblock
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Overview

Journalists often say they act out of instinct and experience. Yet how do we reconcile this with academic discussions of the effects of ownership, advertising, news frames, and other institutional and cultural constraints on news production? News Production: Theory and practice bridges this gap between journalistic theory and practice. The book assesses existing sociological theories of journalism and changes to news production through case studies of news production settings and interviews with journalists, thus providing both students and working professionals with an invaluable real-life account of reporting in the context of the contemporary newsroom. Chapters cover practical and theoretical concerns including: Reporting, Propaganda, Meeting Deadlines, Target Audiences, Ethics and Values, Sources, Images, Rise of Marketing Factors. News Production: Theory and practice is key reading for journalism students and those wanting to break into the industry.

About the Author:
David Machin works in the Department of Media and Communications at Leicester University

About the Author:
Sarah Niblock is Reader in Journalism at Brunel University

Synopsis

Sarah Niblock and David Machin bring us a much needed book that bridges the gap between journalistic theory and practice. The authors respond to a recent and growing recognition in academia and indeed journalism of the importance of reflective practice based on consultation of the sociological literature on journalism and the media industry. There is a distinct lack of up-to-date publications on journalists at work, the most recent ethnographies having been published in the 1980s. This book will provide detailed ethnographies of eight different news production settings. Each chapter follows two news workers through their daily routines, detailing the exact nature of their jobs, the constraints they may encounter, how they cope with those constraints and finally to what extent their work can be understood through reference to the sociological theory and vice versa. Chapters include "News agencies: something to please everyone", "The roving reporter", "Photojournalism" and "The new reporter learning the ropes".
The book is set in context by two opening chapters on the "History of News" and the "Sociology of News gathering". The former holds the premise that it is impossible to understand journalistic practice, the workings of the industry, or news values and the morality of "objectivity" without looking at the way that the news industry has grown up over the past 100 or so years. The emphasis of this chapter is very much on looking forward to the ethnographies which follow. "Sociology of news gathering" similarly details the sociological theory relevant to the ensuing chapters, theories which will be constantly referred back to throughout the course of the book. The section will be comprised of a review of the sociological literature on news agencies, news gathering, news values, the public sphere and tabloidisation.
This book will be an invaluable and much-needed real-life account of reporting in the context of contemporary newsrooms. For students taking practical units in news reporting, sub-editing and even law and ethics, this text will provide the type of concrete examples they will need to consolidate their skills-based training. The ethnographies will provide case-studies against which they can compare their experiences. Most journalism and media courses require their students to complete work-based assignments which are assessed through reflective reports. This book will help students prepare for their placements by gaining a strong sense of the working environment and tasks. It will also help students raise questions about their placements to form the basis of their reports. These reports expect them to synthesise the practice of journalism with the critical accounts of the profession by academics. No other journalism text does this.

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Book Details

Published
December 1, 2006
Publisher
Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Pages
208
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780415371407

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