2019
DOI: 10.1080/21670811.2019.1581071
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What Does Digital Journalism Studies Look Like?

Abstract: This article analyses the characteristics of digital journalism studies through an empirical investigation of all articles published in the journal Digital Journalism, from its launch in 2013 to issue 6, 2018. The aim of the analysis is to identify dominant themes and degrees of diversity and interdisciplinary in digital journalism studies, and to identify biases and blind spots. The article is based on analysis of keywords, abstracts and references used in all articles published in the journal. The findings s… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
(17 reference statements)
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“…This issue of Digital Journalism has sought to further advance the debate and understanding of digital journalism, and has offered us a specific opportunity to engage with the questions surrounding these two fields to further our understanding and definition of both digital journalism and Digital Journalism Studies. In order to advance this, we offer some reflexive insight into the types of articles that this very journal has published from its inception in 2013 until mid-2018 (Steensen et al 2019). This research reveals a strong emphasis on the changing nature of digital platforms and a dominant social science perspective, at the expense of articles that explore, for example, history and context or which would build new and novel theories drawing on interdisciplinary knowledge.…”
Section: Synthesizing Digital Journalism (Part Ii)mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…This issue of Digital Journalism has sought to further advance the debate and understanding of digital journalism, and has offered us a specific opportunity to engage with the questions surrounding these two fields to further our understanding and definition of both digital journalism and Digital Journalism Studies. In order to advance this, we offer some reflexive insight into the types of articles that this very journal has published from its inception in 2013 until mid-2018 (Steensen et al 2019). This research reveals a strong emphasis on the changing nature of digital platforms and a dominant social science perspective, at the expense of articles that explore, for example, history and context or which would build new and novel theories drawing on interdisciplinary knowledge.…”
Section: Synthesizing Digital Journalism (Part Ii)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This research reveals a strong emphasis on the changing nature of digital platforms and a dominant social science perspective, at the expense of articles that explore, for example, history and context or which would build new and novel theories drawing on interdisciplinary knowledge. Steensen et al (2019) also highlight that current definitions of digital journalism-when based on this literature-need to further consider the types of knowledge that digital journalism creates, its role as a meaning-making system, and its relationship to other social institutions and issues of power. This brings us to the second debut within this issue: the rich and diverse array of conceptual articles, each focusing on digital journalism as a key concept.…”
Section: Synthesizing Digital Journalism (Part Ii)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is exemplified in how digital (public) news streams are blended with audiences' personal and affective reactions to them (Papacharissi, 2015). The increasingly symbiotic and intimate relationship between digital journalism and audiences (Steensen et al, 2019) arguably applies specifically to entrepreneurial journalism and sets it apart from legacy media (e.g. Siapera & Papadopoulou, 2016).…”
Section: Introduction -Entrepreneurial Pioneers and Journalism's Hybrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The collection contributes not only to media research, but also to academic disciplines such as health and welfare, psychology, sociology, policy, and culture. It therefore addresses concerns that humanistic approaches are lacking in related studies (Steensen et al, 2019) as anti-hermeneutic approaches again increasingly come to the forefront (Malmberg & Nordenstreng, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%