This entry discusses the role of emotionality in journalism, demonstrating that even if journalism has always been emotional, research on the topic has been slower to arrive. This is due to a historical suspicion of emotionality, tied to ideals of liberal democratic theory and the allegiance to journalistic objectivity. The entry provides an overview of scholarship on the varied roles of emotion in journalistic practices, texts and audience. As such work has matured, and taken into consideration developments such as the rise of social media and the emergence of citizen journalism, we now have a more nuanced understanding of emotion as a tool and a force in journalism
The era of digital journalism represents a shift in the forms of knowing – or epistemology – of jour...
The main aim of this essay is to examine the extent to which journalists choose certain emotional wo...
This introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context that informs a multidisciplinary a...
This entry explores scholarly research on emotion and intimacy in journalism. This growing body of w...
Until recently, the notion of emotion in media studies and commu- nication research was mostly exami...
In this essay, we contextualize journalism in an emotionally charged networked environment. As journ...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
This article develops the idea of an “emotional turn” in journalism studies, which has led to an inc...
This article is from a talk given by Charlie Beckett at the University of Amsterdam on 20/2/16. This...
In journalism studies, an interest in emotions has gathered momentum during the last decade, leading...
This chapter traces some of the key arguments around the role of emotion in media content, ranging ...
How much should journalists use emotion to tell a story? How important is emotion in the way we sele...
Below is an extract from the new essay in the Social Media and Society Journal by Charlie Beckett an...
Taking as its vantage point Gaye Tuchman’s (1972) notion of the strategic ritual of objectivity, thi...
The era of digital journalism represents a shift in the forms of knowing – or epistemology – of jour...
The main aim of this essay is to examine the extent to which journalists choose certain emotional wo...
This introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context that informs a multidisciplinary a...
This entry explores scholarly research on emotion and intimacy in journalism. This growing body of w...
Until recently, the notion of emotion in media studies and commu- nication research was mostly exami...
In this essay, we contextualize journalism in an emotionally charged networked environment. As journ...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
This article develops the idea of an “emotional turn” in journalism studies, which has led to an inc...
This article is from a talk given by Charlie Beckett at the University of Amsterdam on 20/2/16. This...
In journalism studies, an interest in emotions has gathered momentum during the last decade, leading...
This chapter traces some of the key arguments around the role of emotion in media content, ranging ...
How much should journalists use emotion to tell a story? How important is emotion in the way we sele...
Below is an extract from the new essay in the Social Media and Society Journal by Charlie Beckett an...
Taking as its vantage point Gaye Tuchman’s (1972) notion of the strategic ritual of objectivity, thi...
The era of digital journalism represents a shift in the forms of knowing – or epistemology – of jour...
The main aim of this essay is to examine the extent to which journalists choose certain emotional wo...
This introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context that informs a multidisciplinary a...