2022
DOI: 10.1075/prag.18.1.05pan
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Editing and genre conflict

Abstract: Although corporate press releases are ‘preformulated’ to fit some of the conventions of journalistic reports, their style at times seems quite different from the one favoured by journalists. That is, there appear to exist stylistic conflicts between the press release genre and the press report genre. This study investigates the nature of these conflicts by means of a corpus analysis of the reworking strategies employed by journalists that actually use press releases to compose press reports. Roughly, two or… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 13 publications
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“…A traditional piece of PR messaging should be more informative, matter-of-fact and clearly framed (Hallahan, 1999), but it may be (should be) devoid of overt marketing language to differentiate it from a brochure or advertisement (Catenaccio, 2008). Bluntly put, if it is constructed well, a journalist could quickly edit it and present it for publication, irrespective of the ethical and presentational issues that may occur (Maat, 2007;Maat, 2008;Maat and de Jong, 2013;Raeymaeckers et al, 2012, p. 148).…”
Section: Deployment Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A traditional piece of PR messaging should be more informative, matter-of-fact and clearly framed (Hallahan, 1999), but it may be (should be) devoid of overt marketing language to differentiate it from a brochure or advertisement (Catenaccio, 2008). Bluntly put, if it is constructed well, a journalist could quickly edit it and present it for publication, irrespective of the ethical and presentational issues that may occur (Maat, 2007;Maat, 2008;Maat and de Jong, 2013;Raeymaeckers et al, 2012, p. 148).…”
Section: Deployment Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%