Journalism, Audiences and Diaspora

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2015-04-08
Publisher(s): Palgrave Macmillan
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Summary

Journalism, Audiences and Diaspora is an important intervention into the scholarship on diasporic communication, as it reflects the many ways that journalism resists reification in the study of cultural, racial, ethnic communities. This collection takes the study of diasporic communication beyond the level of simply praising its existence, to offering critical engagements and analysis with the systems of journalistic production and dissemination as they relate to people who are living outside the borders of their birth nation, offering compelling case studies of production, process and consumption practices. Taking diasporic journalism seriously, as this book does, means examining how diasporic news discourses push back against, and at times reaffirm, existing national and transnational power relations. The 15 chapters in this book explore how diasporic communities engage with local, national, and global processes (social, cultural, governmental) and how diasporic news reflects those linkages.

Author Biography

Ola Ogunyemi is Principle Lecturer in Journalism at the University of Lincoln, UK, and the convener of Media of Diaspora Research Group. He has extensive teaching and research experience in both the United Kingdom and overseas and received his PhD in journalism from Moscow State University. He regularly publishes in academic journals and is author of What Newspapers, Films, and Television do Africans Living in Britain See and Read?: The Media of the African Diaspora.

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Foreword; Ralph Negrine
Acknowledgements
1.Conceptualising the Media of Diaspora; Ola Ogunyemi
PART I: PRODUCTION PRACTICES
2.Imagine what the Gentiles Must Think: Editors of the Jewish Press Reflect on Covering the Bernie Madoff Financial Scandal; Hinda Mandell
3.Transnational Public Spheres and Deliberative Politics in Zimbabwe: An Analysis of www.NewZimbabwe.com; Shepherd Mpofu
4.Negotiating Cultural Taboos in News Reporting: A Case Study of the Diasporic Media in the UK; Ola Ogunyemi
5.Journalism of Turkish Language Newspapers in the UK; Sanem Sahin
PART II: NEWS PRODUCTION AND PROCESSING
6.Discursive Inclusion and Hegemony: The Politics of Representation in Migrant Minority Media; Lucía Echevarría Vecino, Alicia Ferrández Ferrer, and Gregory Dallemagne
7.The Voice of the International Community': A Critical Discourse Analysis of Immigration Reports in The Copenhagen Post; Teke Ngomba
8.The South Asian-Canadian Media's Resistance to Gender and Cultural Stereotyping; Anupreet Sandhu Bhamra and Paul Fontaine
9.The impact of the Yom Kippur War (1973) in the Jewish-Argentine Diaspora Press; Laura Schenquer and Liliana Mayer
10. The Counter-Journalism of Roma Minority Media in Bulgaria; Svetlana D. Hristova
PART III: RECEPTION AND CONSUMPTION
11. Dispatches from the Dispersed: Comparatively Analysing the Role of Internet-Based Diaspora Journalism in Zimbabwean and Iranian Contexts; Donya Alinejad and Bruce Mutsvairo
12.Contested Place and Truth-Work: Investigating News Reception and Diasporic Sense of Place Among British Jews; Eyal Lavi
13. Diaspora Media Consumption: A Case study of UKZambians Magazine; Brian Chama
14.New Media Use by the U.K.'s Palestinian Diaspora; Amira Halperin
15. Longing and Belonging: An Exploration of the Online News Consumption Practices of the Zimbabwean Diaspora; Tendai Chari
Postscript; Ola Ogunyemi
Index

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