2015
DOI: 10.1080/17512786.2015.1051357
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Cultural Journalism and Cultural Critique in a changing Media Landscape

Abstract: This special issue addresses a topic of journalism studies that has previously been somewhat neglected but which has gained increasing scholarly attention since the mid-2000s: the coverage and evaluation of art and culture, or what we term "cultural journalism and cultural critique." In this introduction, we highlight three issues that serve to frame the study of cultural journalism and cultural critique more generally and the eight articles of this special issue more specifically: (1) the constant challenge o… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The fact that "cultural journalism" has become a more commonly used international scholarly term since the mid-2010s (e.g., da Silva & Silva, 2014;Heikkilä et al, 2017;Hovden & Knapskog, 2015;Jaakkola, 2015;Kersten & Janssen, 2017;Kristensen & From, 2015a;Kristensen & Riegert, 2017) denotes a middle-ground perspective between the very inclusive and more narrowly delineated terms and the emerging institutionalisation of cultural journalism as a distinct sub-discipline in journalism studies. This is confirmed by the fact that even though cultural journalism may not (yet) have its own journals or conference divisions, it is offered as an academic subject at many universities.…”
Section: Diverse Terminologies About Cultural Journalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The fact that "cultural journalism" has become a more commonly used international scholarly term since the mid-2010s (e.g., da Silva & Silva, 2014;Heikkilä et al, 2017;Hovden & Knapskog, 2015;Jaakkola, 2015;Kersten & Janssen, 2017;Kristensen & From, 2015a;Kristensen & Riegert, 2017) denotes a middle-ground perspective between the very inclusive and more narrowly delineated terms and the emerging institutionalisation of cultural journalism as a distinct sub-discipline in journalism studies. This is confirmed by the fact that even though cultural journalism may not (yet) have its own journals or conference divisions, it is offered as an academic subject at many universities.…”
Section: Diverse Terminologies About Cultural Journalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This could also be phrased as a change from hard news to soft news (e.g., Reinemann, Stanyer, Scherr, & Legnante, ). As a result, media and journalism studies today examine not only political news but also human interest stories (Hughes, ), celebrity journalism (Dubied & Hanitzsch, ), gossip journalism (Van den Bulck, Paulussen, & Bels, ), lifestyle journalism (Hanusch, , ), arts journalism (Harries & Wahl‐Jorgensen, ; Janssen, ), and cultural journalism (Heikkilä, Purhonen, & Lauronen, ; Jaakkola, ; Kristensen & From, ; Kristensen & Riegert, ). These specialised types of journalism may be distinct in theory but often overlap in practice in terms of focus areas and the professionals who produce them.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Th is is important because the professional logics of this beat, especially the priority given to opinionated approaches and personal style, seem to fi t well with the logics of social media. Th e article combines research on journalists' use of social media (e.g., Brems et al, 2016;Canter, 2013Canter, , 2015Hanusch & Bruns, 2017;Hedman & Djerf-Pierre, 2013Hermida, 2010Hermida, , 2013Hermida, , 2017Vis 2013) with theoretical and empirical research on cultural journalists as a professional group (e.g., Forde, 2003;Jaakkola, 2015;Kristensen & From, 2015a;Kristensen & Riegert, 2017). Methodologically, the study applies a mixed-methods approach: Qualitative interviews with Danish cultural editors establish the strategic use of social media in Danish cultural newsrooms, while a quantitative mapping of selected Danish cultural journalists' Twitter and Facebook communication outlines the broader contours of this communication, illustrated by qualitative examples.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, this article focuses on churnalism in cultural journalism, which is the term used in a lot of European and especially Nordic research (for overviews, see Kristensen and From 2015a;Jaakkola 2015); the term comprises news stories, reviews and commentaries on art and culture. 2 The article focuses especially on churnalism in professionally produced cultural journalism in institutionalised newspapers.…”
Section: Research Context: Why Study Churnalism In Newspapers' Culturmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Turner and Orange 2013). Consequently, studies have emerged that look more closely at specialised but also hybrid types of journalism, such as arts journalism (Harries and Wahl-Jorgensen 2007;Janssen, Kuipers, and Verboord 2008;Sarrimo 2016;Verboord and Janssen 2015), cultural journalism (Golin and Cardoso 2009;Jaakkola 2015;Kristensen and From 2015a), lifestyle journalism (Hanusch 2012;Kristensen and From 2012) and celebrity journalism (Dubied and Hanitzsch 2014;Van den Bulck, Paulussen, and Bels 2016). This newer research agenda that studies these topics as specialised types of journalism with their own norms and routines can be seen as a counter-trend to the inclination towards studying "the most sacred part of journalism": political journalism (Neveu 2002, 23).…”
Section: Research Context: Why Study Churnalism In Newspapers' Culturmentioning
confidence: 99%