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The Shift from High to Liquid Ideals. Making Sense of Journalism and Its Change through a Multidimensional Model

Abstract
By reading qualitative studies, surveys, organisational histories, and textbooks, one can claim that the ethos of journalists has undergone fundamental changes in recent decades. The “high modern” journalistic ethos of the 1970s and 1980s was committed to the core values of the journalistic profession: objectivity, public service, consensus maintenance, gate-keeping, and recording of the recent past. After the millennium, these central ideals have become more ambivalent and “liquid”: subjectivity, consumer service, the watchdog role, agenda-setting, and forecasting the future seem to be more tempting alternatives than before. This article develops an analytic framework that elaborates the simple narrative from “high modern” to “liquid modern” journalism. Five key elements, namely, (1) knowledge, (2) audience, (3) power, (4) time, and (5) ethics, are discussed and problematized to suggest a more nuanced view of the changing professional ethos of journalism.
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review, 34 (Special Issue) p. 141-154
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37419
Collections
  • Books / Böcker
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pdf (487.5Kb)
Date
2013-12
Author
Koljonen, Karin
Editor
Allern, Sigurd
Bødker, Henrik
Eide, Martin
Lauk, Epp
Pollack, Ester
Keywords
journalistic profession
core elements of journalism
professional ethos
high/ liquid modern ideals
multidimensional model
analysis of change
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-86523-83-1
ISSN
1403-1108
Language
eng
Metadata
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