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558 result(s) for "Press and journalism in literature."
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Comunicar la moda en internet
Internet es hoy el canal paradigmático mediante el cual acceder a una información inmediata, global e ilimitada sobre moda, que estimula a todos aquellos interesados por este fenómeno de múltiples caras. Los usuarios indagan, investigan, se entretienen y compran en este escenario de fronteras difusas que acapara sugestivamente su atención. ¿Cómo han cambiado las dinámicas informativas? ¿Qué actores las protagonizan y cómo funcionan? ¿Qué entornos sociales roban los preciosos minutos de atención de los usuarios? Medios, marcas e influencers forman parte del ecosistema informativo cien por cien visual y ágil. Este libro presenta una base teórica, casos reales y testimonios de profesionales que ayudan a entender este nuevo sistema con un efecto radical sobre la industria. [Texto de la editorial].
\Truer than anything true\: 'In Our Time' and journalism. (elements of journalistic style in Ernest Hemingway's fiction)
Ernest Hemingway's experience as a journalist is usually cited when discussing his novel, 'In Our Time'. The title connects readers with the work by including them, and the writing style adds to the impression of truthfulness through the connection the readers make between journalism and truth. Couching his prose in journalistic form, Hemingway offers the readers the context of truth-in-journalism by which to view his truth-in-fiction.
Evelyn Waugh and William Gerhardie
Evelyn Waugh's reaction to William Gerhardie is examined in order to suggest the nature of Gerhardie's appeal. Waugh's \"Black Mischief\" and Gerhardie's \"The Polyglots\" are compared.
Health care journalism
\"This timely book describes the details of three real case studies of investigative journalism about health care. Stories include journalists exposing wrongdoing by drug companies, neglect of dying patients in by hospice home-care providers, and lead-poisoning from drinking water in Flint, Michigan. Readers will gain an understanding of the research process, the ethical standards journalists must follow, and the perseverance required to confirm a story and affect change\"-- Provided by publisher.
Narratives in motion
Interwar Portugal was in many ways a microcosm of Europe's encounter with modernity: reshaped by industrialization, urban growth, and the antagonism between liberalism and authoritarianism, it also witnessed new forms of media and mass culture that transformed daily life. This fascinating study of newspapers in 1920s Portugal explores how the new \"modernist reportage\" embodied the spirit of the era while mediating some of its most spectacular episodes, from political upheavals to lurid crimes of passion. In the process, Luís Trindade illuminates the twofold nature of that journalism—both historical account and material object, it epitomized a distinctly modern entanglement of narrative and event.
Modernist fiction and news : representing experience in the early twentieth century
\"Modernist Fiction and News characterizes modernism in terms of its intimate, creative, and experimental relationship with a newly reorganized and rapidly expanding news industry. Writers such as Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, John Dos Passos, and Virginia Woolf engage with the discourse and narratives of the news in order to establish an experimental space in which to represent experience with the hope of greater immediacy and faithfulness to reality\"-- Provided by publisher.
The Watchdog Still Barks
Upends the traditional media narrative that watchdog (accountability) journalism is in a long, dismaying declineWatchdog reporting has played a critical role in the events of the moment, from the 2016 election to the developing political situation Perhaps no other function of a free press is as important as the watchdog role-its ability to monitor the work of the government. It is easier for politicians to get away with abusing power, wasting public funds, and making poor decisions if the press is not shining its light with what is termed \"accountability reporting.\" This need has become especially clear in recent months, as the American press has come under virulent direct attack for carrying out its watchdog duties. This book presents a study of how this most important form of journalism, watchdog reporting, came of age in the digital era at American newspapers. Based on the first content analysis to focus specifically on accountability journalism nationally,The Watchdog Still Barksexamines the front pages of nine newspapers, located across the United States, for clues on how papers addressed the watchdog role as the advent of the Internet transformed journalism. This portrait of the modern newspaper industry shows how papers of varying sizes and ownership structures around the country marshaled resources for accountability reporting despite significant financial and technological challenges. Although the American newspaper industry contracted significantly during the 1990s and 2000s, as the digital transformation drove down circulation and print ad revenues, the data collected here shows that papers studied actually held fast to the watchdog role. Although the newspapers studied all endured large budget and staff cuts during the 20 years studied as paid circulation and advertising dropped, the amount of deep watchdog reporting on their front pages generally increased over time.The Watchdog Still Barkscontains original interviews with editors of the newspapers studied, who explain why they are staking their papers' futures on the one thing that American newspapers still do better than any other segment of the media-watchdog and investigative reporting. Uses empirical methods (content analysis and interviews), where previous studies have generalized from anecdotes (and arrived at the wrong conclusion)