Digital War Reporting examines war reporting in a digital age. It shows how new technologies open up innovative ways for journalists to convey the horrors of warfare while, at the same time, creating opportunities for propaganda, censorship and control. Topics discussed include:
- How is the role of the war reporter evolving as digital technologies become ever more prominent?
- What is the rhetoric of war in digital journalism? How does an emphasis on liveness, immediacy or realness shape public perceptions of the nature of warfare itself?
- Is technology widening the gap between ‘us’ and ‘them’, or are new kinds of empathy being established with distant others as time, space and place are effectively compressed?
A key focus is journalists’ use of digital imagery, real-time video and audio reports, multimedia databases – as well as satellites, broadband, podcasting, and mobile telephones – in the reporting of a range of wars, conflicts and crises. The examples analysed range from 24-hour television news coverage of the Persian Gulf War, the first ‘internet war’ in Kosovo, digital photography, from September 11 to Abu Ghraib, and bloggers in Iraq, including journalists, soldiers and ordinary citizens.
Digital War Reporting is required reading for students, researchers and journalists.
Table of Content
1 New Wars, New Reporting 1
2 The ‘First Internet War’ 28
3 Conflicted Realities 58
4 The Citizen Journalist at War 92
5 Visual Truths: Images in Wartime 130
6 Making Connections: The Politics of Mediation 166
References 188
Index 206
About the author
Donald Matheson, Senior Lecturer in Mass Communication, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Stuart Allan, Professor of Journalism, Bournemouth University