Aggregating the news secondhand storytelling and the changing work of digital journalism

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Beteiligte: Coddington, Mark (VerfasserIn)
Verfasserangabe: Mark Coddington
veröffentlicht:
New York Columbia University Press [2019]
Medientyp: Buch, E-Book

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Beschreibung: Revision of author's thesis (doctoral) 2015, titled Telling secondhand stories : news aggregation and the production of journalistic knowledge
Literaturverzeichnis: Seite [259]-269
Umfang: XI, 282 Seiten
ISBN: 9780231187305
9780231187312
0231187300
0231187319
Werktitel: Telling secondhand stories
Hochschulschriftenvermerk: Dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, 2015
Sprache: Englisch
Schlagwörter:
Erscheint auch als: Coddington, Mark (Mark Allen), Aggregating the news, New York : Columbia University Press, [2019]
Weitere Ausgaben: Aggregating the News: Secondhand Knowledge and the Erosion of Journalistic Authority
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Kollektion: Verbunddaten SWB
Inhaltsangabe

"Amid the torrent of information we receive every day, aggregation of previously reported stories allows readers to streamline, summarize, and process the news. While aggregation in one form or another has been part of journalism since the nineteenth century, it has taken on a new prominence and influence in today's media ecosystem While aggregation practices are increasingly being adopted by new digital entities and leading news organizations via news apps, e-mail newsletters, and other formats, they are denigrated by journalists as not "real" journalism and inferior to reporting. More recently, aggregation has been viewed with suspicion as a practice that allows for the news to be repackaged in ways that reflect political bias. Despite the tendency of some aggregators to distort the news, whether for the purpose of clicks or politics, aggregation, Coddington argues, serve an important purpose in the contemporary news environment. Given that aggregation is likely here to stay, journalists and readers need to develop practices to better understand and improve its implementation and influence. Coddington's work is based on his fieldwork and interviews with aggregators at five different news organizations, including both startups and legacy media organizations that use aggregation. The book focuses on how aggregators make decisions on what to publish, how they create narrative, how they understand their audiences, and how they view their own work"--