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The Invention of Journalism   
ÀúÀÚ : Jean K. Chalaby  
ÃâÆÇ»ç : Palgrave Macmillan
ÃâÆdz⵵ : 2000.01.21
ÆäÀÌÁö¼ö : 212   ( ±Ç¼ö : 1 )
I S B N : 0312212860
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Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Tables
Introduction
Part I A Tale of Two Discourses
1 `Knowledge is Power': The Working-Class
Unstampeds as an Example of Public Discourse
1.1 The Legal and Political Context of the Working-Class Unstampeds
1.2 The Principle of Publicity and the Unstampeds
1.3 Reading Public Texts
2 The Formation of the Journalistic Field
2.1 Journalism as a Field of Discursive Production
2.2 Economic Competition within the Journalistic Field
2.3 Economic Competition and the Process
of Structuration in the Journalistic Field
2.4 No Ordinary Press-Owners: The Coming of Age of Press Barons
Part II Discourse and Method: Options for Sociology
3 Beyond the Prison-House of Language:
Discourse as a Sociological Concept
3.1 Sociology and Philology
Part III Discursive Transformations in the
British Press, 1850s-1930s
4 Press and Politics: A New Relationship
4.1 Journalism and Social Identities
4.2 The Depoliticization of the British Press
4.3 The 1922 General Election
4.4 Consequences of the Depoliticization of the Press on Politics and Political
Discourse
5 Discursive Norms and Practices in Journalism
5.1 Interviewing and Reporting
5.2 Objectivity as a Discursive Norm
6 Journalistic Discursive Strategies
6.1 Crusadism
6.2 Jingoism
6.3 Sensationalism
7 The Polarization of the British Press
7.1 Market Forces and the Origin of the Gap between Popular and Quality Journalism
7.2 Manufacturing Ignorance
8 Journalists and their Public
8.1 Popular Journalism as a Discourse of Seduction
8.2 The Magic-Mirror Function of the Media
Notes
References
Index

 

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