Reading News as Narrative. Buozis, M. & Creech, B. Journalism Studies, 19(10):1430–1446, 2017. Section: 1430
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Scholars who use textual approaches to study news often blend theoretical perspectives in their work, asking some combination of questions about how news narratives function culturally, how news narratives are produced, and how news narratives are situated epistemologically. These perspectives often lead to compelling insights, and this article argues that a more fully fleshed-out approach to genre in journalism studies offers a robust means for contextualizing a wide array of theoretical concerns. Methodologically, attention to the textual conventions of a genre helps scholars attend to news narratives as both the products of standardized journalistic routines and evidence of broader cultural forces at play, cultural forces that rely upon journalism's implicit authority over the truth. This article lays out guidelines for performing genre analysis while also offering examples for potential future studies.
@article{buozis_reading_2017,
	title = {Reading {News} as {Narrative}},
	volume = {19},
	issn = {1461-670X 1469-9699},
	doi = {10.1080/1461670x.2017.1279030},
	abstract = {Scholars who use textual approaches to study news often blend theoretical perspectives in their work, asking some combination of questions about how news narratives function culturally, how news narratives are produced, and how news narratives are situated epistemologically. These perspectives often lead to compelling insights, and this article argues that a more fully fleshed-out approach to genre in journalism studies offers a robust means for contextualizing a wide array of theoretical concerns. Methodologically, attention to the textual conventions of a genre helps scholars attend to news narratives as both the products of standardized journalistic routines and evidence of broader cultural forces at play, cultural forces that rely upon journalism's implicit authority over the truth. This article lays out guidelines for performing genre analysis while also offering examples for potential future studies.},
	language = {English},
	number = {10},
	journal = {Journalism Studies},
	author = {Buozis, Michael and Creech, Brian},
	year = {2017},
	note = {Section: 1430},
	keywords = {Communication, culture, form, genre studies, journalism and literary studies, knowledge, meanings, media, metajournalistic discourse, myth, narratives, news, news as text},
	pages = {1430--1446},
}

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