The study of journalism has not been — nor should it be — restricted to those who call themselves ‘journalists' or ‘journalism educators’. The cultural practice of journalism focuses on issues, institutions and events ‘from the outside’, so it would seem hypocritical to suggest that journalists alone should have the right to critique journalism. This article looks at the usefulness of cultural studies in enabling a critique and analysis of journalism from a broad range of theoretical and methodological approaches. Drawing from the work of Gramsci and Canadian journalism educator and cultural studies advocate G. Stuart Adam, it suggests that journalism is a set of cultural practices which frame experience and form public consciousness of the...
In Western Europe and the USA, as in Slovenia, there is little interest in the history of journalism...
This essay first appeared in Quadrant, May 1998. It revisits the intellectual conflict between media...
The world of journalism has always been privileged—for good and bad—by the prisms through which we h...
Cultural studies and journalism overlap in important respects. They are both interested in the media...
Drawing upon a range of theoretical perspectives, including cultural studies, postcolonial theory, c...
According to academics in the field of cultural studies, the belief that journalism can report the w...
Culture is a broad term that is often used in a wide variety of contexts. Its meanings can be anythi...
Social system-level analyses of journalism have tended to focus on political and economic influences...
characterised by a simplistic genealogy of cultural studies and conveniently elided the contribution...
Although the phrase 'cultural policy' would rarely form on journalists' lips, the cultural results...
The relationship between journalism and cultural studies in the tertiary education system in Austral...
The study questions some of the attitudes towards framing journalism as a field of study. It suggest...
This chapter evaluates the role of culture and ideology in relation to journalism. Journalists canno...
This article tracks the uneasy coexistence of journalism and cultural studies, arguing that the tens...
Media studies needs to engage own theoretical base and methodology to dissect and critique the curre...
In Western Europe and the USA, as in Slovenia, there is little interest in the history of journalism...
This essay first appeared in Quadrant, May 1998. It revisits the intellectual conflict between media...
The world of journalism has always been privileged—for good and bad—by the prisms through which we h...
Cultural studies and journalism overlap in important respects. They are both interested in the media...
Drawing upon a range of theoretical perspectives, including cultural studies, postcolonial theory, c...
According to academics in the field of cultural studies, the belief that journalism can report the w...
Culture is a broad term that is often used in a wide variety of contexts. Its meanings can be anythi...
Social system-level analyses of journalism have tended to focus on political and economic influences...
characterised by a simplistic genealogy of cultural studies and conveniently elided the contribution...
Although the phrase 'cultural policy' would rarely form on journalists' lips, the cultural results...
The relationship between journalism and cultural studies in the tertiary education system in Austral...
The study questions some of the attitudes towards framing journalism as a field of study. It suggest...
This chapter evaluates the role of culture and ideology in relation to journalism. Journalists canno...
This article tracks the uneasy coexistence of journalism and cultural studies, arguing that the tens...
Media studies needs to engage own theoretical base and methodology to dissect and critique the curre...
In Western Europe and the USA, as in Slovenia, there is little interest in the history of journalism...
This essay first appeared in Quadrant, May 1998. It revisits the intellectual conflict between media...
The world of journalism has always been privileged—for good and bad—by the prisms through which we h...