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How journalists source news A linguistic ethnographic approach Université catholique de Louvain 14 October 2012 Dr. Tom Van Hout tom.vanhout@gmail.com
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ETHNOGRAPHY A 5-slide primer on:
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Foto: medhead (flickr.com)
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cultural ecology a family of methods involving direct and sustained social contact with agents and of richly writing up the encounter, respecting, recording, representing at least partly in its own terms the irreducibility of human experience. (Willis & Trondman 2002: 394)
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ethnography studies meaning in context (fieldwork) participates in, observes and reconstructs documents the how, what and why makes the familiar strange (process) makes the strange familiar (product)
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ethnographic analysis case study methodology = micro-level analyses of social action –evidential: empirical facts –conjectural: meaning in context knowledge is generated inductively
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ethnographic analysis Blommaert, Jan, & Dong, Jie. (2010). Ethnographic Fieldwork: A Beginner's Guide. Bristol: Multilingual Matters.
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NEWS ETHNOGRAPHY Next, a 3 slide outline of
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newsroom ethnographies the organisational requirements of news combine with the professional ideology of objectivity to routinely privilege the voices of the powerful, and this further reinforces the tendency towards the standardised and ideological nature of news. (Cottle 2007: 4)
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a tale of two paradigms Paterson, Chris, & Domingo, David (Eds.). (2011). Making Online News - Volume 2. Newsroom Ethnography in the Second Decade of Internet Journalism (Vol. 2). New York: Peter Lang. Bird, Elizabeth S. (Ed.). (2010). The Anthropology of News and Journalism: Global perspectives. Indiana: Indiana University Press.
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LINGUISTIC ETHNOGRAPHY And finally: 2 slides on
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tying down & opening up "'tying ethnography down': pushing ethnography towards the analysis of clearly delimitable processes, increasing the amount of reported data that is open to falsification, looking to impregnate local description with analytical frameworks drawn from outside. [...] 'opening linguistics up': inviting reflexive sensitivity to the processes involved in the production of linguistic claims and to the potential importance of what gets left out, encouraging a willingness to accept (and run with) the fact that beyond the reach of standardised falsification procedures '[e]xperience … has ways of boiling over, and making us correct our present formulas'." Rampton et al 2004: 4
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discourses education workplace community literacy multimodality
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empirical example Oct 2006 – March 2007 De Standaard How do journalists write from sources?
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access ‘foot in the door’ approach –interview –‘meeloopdag’ –fieldwork
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fieldwork trial & error research protocol –story identification –reporter confirmation –data recording & observation –retrospective interview
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parameters 1.Analyzing the spatiotemporal unfolding of news production; 2.Describing concrete situations in order to interrogate claims made about journalism; 3.Alternating between levels of analytical magnification; 4.Sustaining a dialogue between theory, observation and interpretation
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veldwerk
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analysis
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interview My first idea was actually Now I must give the floor to ‘Ma bon’, it’s Apple
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Writing at warp speed
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descriptive stats AppleTVprocessproductdifferential Total number of characters 30542455599 Total number of words 49140982 Production time (in minutes) 18.11// Pause time (in minutes) 18.24// Total duration of writing process (in minutes) 36.36//
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pause behavior
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fluency
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progression
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writing from sources 1.what journalists do, how they do so and why; 2.knowledge mediation and journalistic representation processes; and 3.ultimately have wider applicability for the study of media production, intertextuality and cultural production in general.
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