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The Electronic Grapevine Diane L. Borden

The Electronic Grapevine By Diane L. Borden

The Electronic Grapevine by Diane L. Borden


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Summary

An examination of how the Internet has affected journalism, drawing from scholarly work and real life experiences of journalists. For students of telecommunications and journalism, as well as scholars in those fields.

The Electronic Grapevine Summary

The Electronic Grapevine: Rumor, Reputation, and Reporting in the New On-line Environment by Diane L. Borden

The widespread use of the Internet as a tool for gathering and disseminating information raises serious questions for journalists--and their readers--about the process of reporting information. Using virtual sources and publishing online is changing the way in which journalism takes place and its effect on the society it serves.

USE LAST THREE PARAGRAPHS ONLY FOR GENERAL CATALOGS... The Electronic Grapevine explores the use of online media by reporters in the United States, and examines the impact that usage may have on how journalism is framed in the cultural sphere, as well as how it is conducted in the professional one. It contains a mix of material examining how it feels to do online journalism, how it affects those who consume it, different ways that media scholars go about trying to understand it better, and the likely social and cultural impact of Internet-like technologies on the public, at whom all this electronic information is eventually aimed.

Drawing from the emerging scholarly work in the field and from the real-life experiences of working journalists, Borden and Harvey collect contributions that examine why journalists use the Internet, what changes it makes in how they approach their jobs, and what differences they see in conducting their daily newsgathering with this medium rather than other methods. The volume also analyses when and why journalists do not use online media and what the impact of the decision to use or not use the Internet may mean for the outer world, whose perceptions of itself are so often shaped by journalistic portrait.

This series of thought-provoking, original essays explores the impact of computer-based information and communication services on traditional journalistic routines and practices, and thereby addresses a critical gap in the scholarly literature on communication, law, and culture. Distinguishing between linkage devices like the Internet, and database resources such as LEXIS/NEXIS, America Online, and others, this book examines the ways in which both types of online services may reshape and redefine not only the products of journalistic effort, but the newsgathering process itself.

The Electronic Grapevine Reviews

This comprehensive report of the current state of the art should be available in the libraries of all institutions at which journalism is seriously studied at any level.
-CHOICE

Collections such as The Electronic Grapevine generate important discussions on issues that must find their way to the agendas of thoughful scholars and journalists committed to upholding the traditional canons of the profession and shaping, as best we are able, the cultural and social impacts of an on-line environment evolving at break-neck speed.
-Convergence

About Diane L. Borden

Borden, Diane L.; Harvey, Kerric

Table of Contents

Contents: Preface. Part I: Rumor.J.E. Newhagen, M.R. Levy, The Future of Journalism in a Distributed Communication Architecture. S. Hornig Priest, Public Opinion, Expert Opinion, and the Illusion of Consensus: Gleaning Points of View Electronically. W.S. Williams, The Blurring of the Line Between Advertising and Journalism in the On-Line Environment. P. Aufderheide, Niche-Market Culture, Off and On Line. Part II: Reputation.J. Primuth, Cyberspace: A Consensual Hallucination. K. Harvey, Going On Line With the U.S. Constitution: Gender Discussions in the Cultural Context of the First Amendment. D.L. Borden, Cyberlibel: Time to Flame the Times Standard. Part III: Reporting.B. Henderson, J. Fernbank, The Campus Press: A Practical Approach to On-Line Newspapers. L.C. Christopher, Technology and Journalism in the Electronic Newsroom. S.S. Ross, Journalists' Use of On-Line Technology and On-Line Sources. W. Evans, Content Analysis in an Era of Interactive News: Assessing 21st Century Symbolic Environments. K. Kawamoto, Making Sense of the New On-Line Environment in the Context of Traditional Mass Communications Study.

Additional information

NLS9780805821727
9780805821727
0805821724
The Electronic Grapevine: Rumor, Reputation, and Reporting in the New On-line Environment by Diane L. Borden
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Inc
1997-09-01
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - The Electronic Grapevine