In:Participation, Engagement and Collaboration in Newsmaking: A postfoundational perspective
Edited by Jana Declercq, Geert Jacobs, Felicitas Macgilchrist and Astrid Vandendaele
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 94] 2021
► pp. 129–150
Chapter 6Journalism now
Central and marginal aspects of news craft
Published online: 10 November 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.94.c6
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.94.c6
Abstract
The social dimension behind the (re-)production of news
genre forms is examined in news reporting examples that present different
discourse outcomes in the “postfoundational” social world for whom the
prestige of news craft remains key (Cotter 2010). Stories in “legacy” journalism (New York
Times) are compared with the San Quentin News,
the oldest prison newspaper in the US (Drummond 2020). The SQN, while socially
marginal, reflects central values of journalism in its story forms and
demonstrates the direct link that media have with their audience. The NYT,
while socially central, is itself becoming marginalized in the broader media
context as traditional news stories assume less importance in everyday
meaning-making. Together, they show how foundational discourse parameters
shift or are reconfigured.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Context, social consensus and communicative change
- New news and tomorrow’s news today
- Situating the San Quentin News in the US
mediascape
- Online variants
- Impacts of media change and social awareness
- Writing in context
- A discursive and interactional balancing act
- Social value and narrative change
- Summary and conclusions
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