Making News Outside Legacy Media Peripheral Actors within an African Communication Ecology

被引:18
作者
Cheruiyot, David [1 ]
Wahutu, J. Siguru [2 ,3 ]
Mare, Admire [4 ]
Ogola, George [5 ]
Mabweazara, Hayes Mawindi [4 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Ctr Media & Journalism Studies, Groningen, Netherlands
[2] NYU, Dept Media Culture & Commun, New York, NY USA
[3] Harvard Univ, Berkman Klein Ctr Internet & Soc, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[4] Univ Johannesburg, Fac Humanities, Dept Commun & Media, Johannesburg, South Africa
[5] Univ Cent Lancashire, Sch Arts & Media, Preston, Lancs, England
[6] Univ Glasgow, Glasgow Univ Media Grp, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland
关键词
Communication ecology; journalistic fields; legacy media; media production; peripheral actors; INTERLOPER MEDIA; FACT-CHECKING; JOURNALISM; PARTICIPATION; ANALYTICS;
D O I
10.1080/23743670.2021.2046397
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
One of the recurrent questions in journalism scholarship is whether journalism as a profession and institution can grow and thrive outside the traditional newsroom (especially, with the dominant agenda-setting media in most African countries being either state- or privately run press). In introducing this special issue, we revisit this pertinent question, while also considering the implications of today's digitally networked continent, and the question of the ever-expanding communication ecology that is a dynamic space for media production by both human and non-human actors. First, we acknowledge that the current peripheralization of journalism is a global phenomenon, and that digital technologies seem to reproduce similar trends and patterns in various journalistic cultures across the world, and therefore the increasingly connected continent cannot be understood in isolation. The case studies featured in our special issue show that digital technologies have clearly fast-tracked the changes in media production and intensified the disruptive effects of the operations of non-journalistic actors within the continent's communication ecology. We then argue that when carefully considered, these changes in media production and journalistic practices are merely part of a continuation of trends that preceded the digital age. Non-traditional ways of making news have been driven mainly by non-journalistic actors' perpetual need to challenge or question traditional actors, in media and politics, as the exclusive disseminators, the dominant voices, or the sole arbiters in spaces of deliberation within the communication ecology.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 14
页数:14
相关论文
共 56 条
[1]   PRACTICALLY ENGAGED The entanglements between data journalism and civic tech [J].
Baack, Stefan .
DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2018, 6 (06) :673-692
[2]   BOUNDARY WORK, INTERLOPER MEDIA, AND ANALYTICS IN NEWSROOMS An analysis of the roles of web analytics companies in news production [J].
Belair-Gagnon, Valerie ;
Holton, Avery E. .
DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2018, 6 (04) :492-508
[3]  
Bosch T, 2018, INT J COMMUN-US, V12, P2153
[5]   On the cunning of imperialist reason [J].
Bourdieu, P ;
Wacquant, L .
THEORY CULTURE & SOCIETY, 1999, 16 (01) :41-+
[6]  
Buchholz Larissa., 2016, SOCIOLOGICAL REV MON, V64, P31, DOI [10.1002/2059-7932.12001, DOI 10.1002/2059-7932.12001]
[7]   Data Journalism Beyond Legacy Media: The case of African and European Civic Technology Organizations [J].
Cheruiyot, David ;
Baack, Stefan ;
Ferrer-Conill, Raul .
DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2019, 7 (09) :1215-1229
[8]   "FACT-CHECKING AFRICA" Epistemologies, data and the expansion of journalistic discourse [J].
Cheruiyot, David ;
Ferrer-Conill, Raul .
DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2018, 6 (08) :964-975
[9]  
Deuze M., 2005, Journalism, V6, P442, DOI [10.1177/1464884905056815, DOI 10.1177/1464884905056815]
[10]   Where Do We Draw the Line? Interlopers, (Ant)agonists, and an Unbounded Journalistic Field [J].
Eldridge, Scott A., II .
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION, 2019, 7 (04) :8-18