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Mister Pulitzer and the Spider

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Mister Pulitzer and the Spider Synopsis

A spidery network of mobile online media has supposedly changed people, places, time, and their meanings. A prime case is the news. Digital webs seem to have trapped "legacy media," killing off newspapers and journalists' jobs. Did news businesses and careers fall prey to the digital "Spider"?
 
To solve the mystery, Kevin Barnhurst spent thirty years studying news going back to the realism of the 1800s. The usual suspects--technology, business competition, and the pursuit of scoops--are only partly to blame for the fate of news. The main culprit is modernism from the "Mister Pulitzer" era, which transformed news into an ideology called "journalism." News is no longer what audiences or experts imagine. Stories have grown much longer over the past century and now include fewer events, locations, and human beings. Background and context rule instead.
 
News producers adopted modernism to explain the world without recognizing how modernist ideas influence the knowledge they produce. When webs of networked connectivity sparked a resurgence in realist stories, legacy news stuck to big-picture analysis that can alienate audience members accustomed to digital briefs.
 

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780252083914
Publication date: 30th July 2018
Author: Kevin G Barnhurst
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 320 pages
Series: The History of Communication
Genres: Media studies
Reportage, journalism or collected columns
Media, entertainment, information and communication industries
History of the Americas