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Journalism and memory /
~
Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren,
Journalism and memory /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
153.1/2
書名/作者:
Journalism and memory // edited by Barbie Zelizer and Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt.
其他作者:
Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren,
面頁冊數:
1 online resource.
標題:
Collective memory.
標題:
Journalism - Psychological aspects.
標題:
Cultural studies
標題:
Media studies
標題:
Media Studies
標題:
Press & journalism
標題:
PSYCHOLOGY / Cognitive Psychology
標題:
SCIENCE / Cognitive Science
ISBN:
1137263946 (electronic bk.)
ISBN:
9781137263940 (electronic bk.)
內容註:
PART I: TRAJECTORIES OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- 1. Reflections on the Underdeveloped Relations between Journalism and Memory Studies; Jeffrey Olick -- 2. Memory as Foreground, Journalism as Background; Barbie Zelizer -- 3. Shifting the Politics of Memory: Mnemonic Trajectories in a Global Public Terrain; Ingrid Volkmer and Carolyne Lee, -- 4. Collective Memory in a Post-Broadcast World; Jill Edy -- PART II: DOMAINS OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- Journalism and Narrative Memory -- 5. Journalism as a Vehicle of Non-Commemorative Cultural Memory; Michael Schudson -- 6. Counting time: Journalism and the Temporal Resource; Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt -- 7. Reversed memory: Commemorating the Past Through Coverage of the Present; Motti Neiger, Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers -- Journalism and Visual Memory -- 8. Hands and Feet: Photojournalism, the Fragmented Body Politic, and Collective Memory; Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites -- 9. Journalism, Memory and the 'Crowd-Sourced Video Revolution'; Kari Anďn-Papadopoulos -- 10. The Journalist as Memory Assembler: Non-Memory, The War on Terror and The Shooting of Osama Bin Laden; Anna Reading -- 11. A New Memory of War; Andrew Hoskins -- Journalism and Institutional Memory -- 12. The Late News: Memory Work as Boundary Work in the Commemoration of Television Journalists; Matt Carlson and Dan Berkowitz -- 13. Conventions and Cultures, 1863-2013: The Gettysburg Address in the Mind of American Journalism; Barry Schwartz -- 14. Historical Authority and the 'Potent Journalistic Reputation': A Longer View of Legacy-Making in American News Media; Carolyn Kitch -- 15. Argentinean Torturers on Trial: How Are Journalists Covering the Hearings' Memory Work?; Susana Kaiser.
摘要、提要註:
Although journalism has always been an important vehicle of collective memory, it has been neglected in discussions about how memory works. This fascinating book aims to correct that disjuncture, by tracking the ways in which journalism and shared memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each other. How is journalism's address to memory different from that of other institutions? What would the study of memory look like without journalism? And how would our understanding of journalism fall short without paying attention to memory? Bringing together leading scholars in journalism and memory studies, this collection makes explicit the longstanding and complicated role that journalism has played in keeping the past alive. From anniversary issues and media retrospectives to simple verbal and visual analogies connecting past and present, journalism incorporates an address to earlier times across the wide array of its conventions and practices. How it does so and which triumphs and problems ensue in our understanding of collective memory constitute the charter of this volume.
電子資源:
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137263940
Journalism and memory /
Journalism and memory /
edited by Barbie Zelizer and Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt. - 1 online resource. - Palgrave Macmillan memory studies. - Palgrave Macmillan memory studies..
PART I: TRAJECTORIES OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- 1. Reflections on the Underdeveloped Relations between Journalism and Memory Studies; Jeffrey Olick -- 2. Memory as Foreground, Journalism as Background; Barbie Zelizer -- 3. Shifting the Politics of Memory: Mnemonic Trajectories in a Global Public Terrain; Ingrid Volkmer and Carolyne Lee, -- 4. Collective Memory in a Post-Broadcast World; Jill Edy -- PART II: DOMAINS OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- Journalism and Narrative Memory -- 5. Journalism as a Vehicle of Non-Commemorative Cultural Memory; Michael Schudson -- 6. Counting time: Journalism and the Temporal Resource; Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt -- 7. Reversed memory: Commemorating the Past Through Coverage of the Present; Motti Neiger, Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers -- Journalism and Visual Memory -- 8. Hands and Feet: Photojournalism, the Fragmented Body Politic, and Collective Memory; Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites -- 9. Journalism, Memory and the 'Crowd-Sourced Video Revolution'; Kari Anďn-Papadopoulos -- 10. The Journalist as Memory Assembler: Non-Memory, The War on Terror and The Shooting of Osama Bin Laden; Anna Reading -- 11. A New Memory of War; Andrew Hoskins -- Journalism and Institutional Memory -- 12. The Late News: Memory Work as Boundary Work in the Commemoration of Television Journalists; Matt Carlson and Dan Berkowitz -- 13. Conventions and Cultures, 1863-2013: The Gettysburg Address in the Mind of American Journalism; Barry Schwartz -- 14. Historical Authority and the 'Potent Journalistic Reputation': A Longer View of Legacy-Making in American News Media; Carolyn Kitch -- 15. Argentinean Torturers on Trial: How Are Journalists Covering the Hearings' Memory Work?; Susana Kaiser.
Although journalism has always been an important vehicle of collective memory, it has been neglected in discussions about how memory works. This fascinating book aims to correct that disjuncture, by tracking the ways in which journalism and shared memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each other. How is journalism's address to memory different from that of other institutions? What would the study of memory look like without journalism? And how would our understanding of journalism fall short without paying attention to memory? Bringing together leading scholars in journalism and memory studies, this collection makes explicit the longstanding and complicated role that journalism has played in keeping the past alive. From anniversary issues and media retrospectives to simple verbal and visual analogies connecting past and present, journalism incorporates an address to earlier times across the wide array of its conventions and practices. How it does so and which triumphs and problems ensue in our understanding of collective memory constitute the charter of this volume.
ISBN: 1137263946 (electronic bk.)
Source: 629207Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Topical Terms:
377292
Collective memory.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
336502
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: BF378.S65
Dewey Class. No.: 153.1/2
Journalism and memory /
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PART I: TRAJECTORIES OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- 1. Reflections on the Underdeveloped Relations between Journalism and Memory Studies; Jeffrey Olick -- 2. Memory as Foreground, Journalism as Background; Barbie Zelizer -- 3. Shifting the Politics of Memory: Mnemonic Trajectories in a Global Public Terrain; Ingrid Volkmer and Carolyne Lee, -- 4. Collective Memory in a Post-Broadcast World; Jill Edy -- PART II: DOMAINS OF JOURNALISM AND MEMORY -- Journalism and Narrative Memory -- 5. Journalism as a Vehicle of Non-Commemorative Cultural Memory; Michael Schudson -- 6. Counting time: Journalism and the Temporal Resource; Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt -- 7. Reversed memory: Commemorating the Past Through Coverage of the Present; Motti Neiger, Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers -- Journalism and Visual Memory -- 8. Hands and Feet: Photojournalism, the Fragmented Body Politic, and Collective Memory; Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites -- 9. Journalism, Memory and the 'Crowd-Sourced Video Revolution'; Kari Anďn-Papadopoulos -- 10. The Journalist as Memory Assembler: Non-Memory, The War on Terror and The Shooting of Osama Bin Laden; Anna Reading -- 11. A New Memory of War; Andrew Hoskins -- Journalism and Institutional Memory -- 12. The Late News: Memory Work as Boundary Work in the Commemoration of Television Journalists; Matt Carlson and Dan Berkowitz -- 13. Conventions and Cultures, 1863-2013: The Gettysburg Address in the Mind of American Journalism; Barry Schwartz -- 14. Historical Authority and the 'Potent Journalistic Reputation': A Longer View of Legacy-Making in American News Media; Carolyn Kitch -- 15. Argentinean Torturers on Trial: How Are Journalists Covering the Hearings' Memory Work?; Susana Kaiser.
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Although journalism has always been an important vehicle of collective memory, it has been neglected in discussions about how memory works. This fascinating book aims to correct that disjuncture, by tracking the ways in which journalism and shared memory mutually support, undermine, repair and challenge each other. How is journalism's address to memory different from that of other institutions? What would the study of memory look like without journalism? And how would our understanding of journalism fall short without paying attention to memory? Bringing together leading scholars in journalism and memory studies, this collection makes explicit the longstanding and complicated role that journalism has played in keeping the past alive. From anniversary issues and media retrospectives to simple verbal and visual analogies connecting past and present, journalism incorporates an address to earlier times across the wide array of its conventions and practices. How it does so and which triumphs and problems ensue in our understanding of collective memory constitute the charter of this volume.
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http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137263940
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