2006
DOI: 10.1080/13688800601014199
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ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION OF MARTIN CONBOY'SJOURNALISM: A CRITICAL HISTORY, LONDON: SAGE, 2004. (x + 246 pp., ISBN 0761940995, $115 (hbk); 0761941002, $38.95 (pbk)).

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Conboy 2004;Schudson 1981;Stephens 2006;Teel 2006). Apparently, historians of journalism perceive their field of study as including all types of journalism-print, audio-visual, online-but for photojournalism, failing thus to acknowledge it as a constituent form of the modern news reporting as well as to address its varieties, evolution and accomplishments.…”
Section: Histories Of Photojournalismmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Conboy 2004;Schudson 1981;Stephens 2006;Teel 2006). Apparently, historians of journalism perceive their field of study as including all types of journalism-print, audio-visual, online-but for photojournalism, failing thus to acknowledge it as a constituent form of the modern news reporting as well as to address its varieties, evolution and accomplishments.…”
Section: Histories Of Photojournalismmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Either way, it helps explain why no tabloidization arguments for magazines have yet been made *it seems the deeply dumb can dumb down no deeper *but of course! Rooney's criteria for assessing the Sun and the Daily Mirror (Rooney, 2000), McLachlan and Golding's for the Guardian and Times (McLachlan and Golding, 2000) and material from Sparks and Tulloch (2000) and others (Conboy, 2004;Stephenson and Bromley, 1998) have been useful here. The following have been outlined as signs of either tabloidization or the tabloid.…”
Section: Defining Tabloidizationmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Metropolitan newspapers are neither protected nor encouraged by legislation, but seem to develop naturally as part of the general urbanization of society (cf. Conboy 2004). The centralization of commerce and industry, residential patterns, cultural institutions and publically funded infrastructure all help to ensure that more of our activity is drawn towards an urban centre that collects the common social, cultural and political resources that citizens rely upon in their daily lives (cf.…”
Section: Metropolitanismmentioning
confidence: 99%