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In: Mayborn best American newspaper narrative series volume 6
Recipe for the future /[Gayle Reaves] --The loneliest polar bear (The Oregonian) /Kale Williams --Doomed by delay (Chicago Tribune) /Patricia Callahan --Dirty John (Los Angeles Times /Christopher Goffard --Twelve seconds of gunfire (Washington Post) /John Woodrow Cox --His heart, her hands (The Oregonian) /Tom Hallman Jr --The last refugee (The Boston Globe) /Jenna Russell --Wrong way (Tampa Bay Times) /Lisa Gartner and Zachary T. Sampson --About a boy (The Oregonian) /Casey Parks --Hope for the rest of us (Dallas Morning News) /Jennifer Emily --There's nowhere to run (The Washington Post) /Kent Babb --The house on the corner (Tampa Bay Times) /Lane DeGregory.
In: Routledge Focus on Journalism Studies
Cover -- Half Title -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: A Pandemic Stress Test -- 1 A Digital Dark Age for Newspapers -- 2 The Staying Power of the Press -- 3 Press Freedom and Proliferation -- 4 The National Press: From Propaganda to Profit -- 5 The Provincial Press: The Problem of Free -- 6 What If Newspapers Aren't Dying? -- References -- Index.
In: Media and Communications - Technologies, Policies and Challenges
THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY AND JOURNALISM IN TRANSITION -- THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY AND JOURNALISM IN TRANSITION -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- Chapter 1 THE U.S. NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY IN TRANSITION -- Summary -- Introduction -- Industry History -- Industry Conditions -- Industry Cost Cutting: Key to Survival? -- Declining Advertising Revenues, Recession, and the Internet -- Other Factors -- Alternative News Sources -- Rise of the Web -- Interdependence -- Searching for New Business Models -- Nonprofits -- Public Policy Issues -- Congressional Action -- Industry Proposals
The monograph is a research on the representation of natural catastrophes in newspapers published in Western English-speaking countries. It aims to reveal who the newspaper discourse puts the blame on for the damage and destruction (whether the catastrophe is portrayed as a joint outcome of the natural phenomenon and social factors), how the discourse deals with the tension between natural disasters and the Enlightenment ideology of superiority of humankind over nature, and what are common discursive strategies dramatizing the events. The methodology of the research is critical discourse analysis, with the focus on the exploration of semantic macrostructures of the articles, lexical and syntactical analysis and investigation of the narrative structure of victim stories
In: Routledge focus on journalism studies
Preface; Introduction: A Pandemic Stress Test; 1. A Digital Dark Age for Newspapers; 2. The Staying Power of the Press; 3. Press Freedom and Proliferation; 4. The National Press: From Propaganda to Profit; 5. The Provincial Press: The Problem of Free; 6. What if Newspapers Aren't Dying?
Study on two rural newspapers Mahilā ḍakiyā (MD) and Khabar lahariyā (KL) with special focus in rural women development and Mahilā Samākhyā project in Bundelkhand, India
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers 74
Newspapers have been experiencing declining circulation figures and diminishing advertising revenues for several years - both effects might pose a threat to the continuing existence of (print) newspapers. In an earlier paper, Lindstädt & Budzinski (2011) argued from a theoretical viewpoint that industryspecific patterns exist that determine substitution or complementation effects between internet and newspaper advertising. It was argued that retail advertising, in particular, may offer a niche for regional/local newspapers that can be expected to present a sustainable segment of complementarity along with the otherwise mostly substitutional advertising markets. This paper empirically tests these hypotheses by analyzing advertising spending data for newspaper and internet display advertising of 13 different industries in the U.S. from 2001-2010. We find evidence for some of the hypotheses. Whereas some industries showed clear substitution effects between internet display and newspaper advertising, the majority of our hypotheses could be only partly rejected: newspaper substitution effects could be observed, however, in the direction to traditional media platforms instead of internet display advertising. For two retail-sub-industries, the hypotheses could not be rejected for the analyzed period. -- media economics ; advertising ; complementation ; substitution ; newspapers ; internet
In: Journalism in perspective : continuities and disruptions
A rough draft of culture : the Washington post and the invention of the style section -- Storytelling goes mainstream : narrative news and the newspaper establishment -- The movement coalesces : the marketplace, the academy and the community of practice -- The narrative turn and its implications.