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The Life Informatic Newsmaking In The Digital Era Dominic Boyer

  • SKU: BELL-51938764
The Life Informatic Newsmaking In The Digital Era Dominic Boyer
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Life Informatic Newsmaking In The Digital Era Dominic Boyer instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cornell University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.33 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Dominic Boyer
ISBN: 9780801467356, 0801467357
Language: English
Year: 2013

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The Life Informatic Newsmaking In The Digital Era Dominic Boyer by Dominic Boyer 9780801467356, 0801467357 instant download after payment.

News journalism is in the midst of radical transformation brought about by the spread of digital information and communication technology and the rise of neoliberalism. What does it look like, however, from the inside of a news organization? In The Life Informatic, Dominic Boyer offers the first anthropological ethnography of contemporary office-based news journalism. The result is a fascinating account of journalists struggling to maintain their expertise and authority, even as they find their principles and skills profoundly challenged by ever more complex and fast-moving streams of information.Boyer conducted his fieldwork inside three news organizations in Germany (a world leader in digital journalism) supplemented by extensive interviews in the United States. His findings challenge popular and scholarly images of journalists as roving truth-seekers, showing instead the extent to which sedentary office-based "screenwork" (such as gathering and processing information online) has come to dominate news journalism. To explain this phenomenon Boyer puts forth the notion of "digital liberalism"—a powerful convergence of technological and ideological forces over the past two decades that has rebalanced electronic mediation from the radial (or broadcast) tendencies of the mid-twentieth century to the lateral (or peer-to-peer) tendencies that dominate in the era of the Internet and social media. Under digital liberalism an entire regime of media, knowledge, and authority has become integrated around liberal principles of individuality and publicity, both unmaking and remaking news institutions of the broadcast era. Finally, Boyer offers some scenarios for how news journalism will develop in the future and discusses how other intellectual professionals, such as ethnographers, have also become more screenworkers than fieldworkers.

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