Inhoudsopgave
Introduction: Theory Is Not Enough: How to Convert Media and Journalism Studies into Relevant, Useful and Practical Research
Leon Barkho
Part I: What Media Practitioners Say
Chapter 1: Journalists and Scholars: A Short Manifesto
Vin Ray
Chapter 2: Towards a New Relevance: Why the New Media Landscape Requires Journalists and Media Scholars to Forge a Genuine Partnership for the First Time
Matthew Eltringham
Chapter 3: Journalism’s Practitioners and the Academy: Must They Eternally Live in Different Universes?
Kevin Marsh
Chapter 4: Why Practitioners Resent Academic Writing
Leon Barkho
Chapter 5: When the Media Criticize the Media
Åke Pettersson
Chapter 6: Bridging the Chasm: Can Theory Help Media and Journalism Practitioners
Leon Barkho
Part II: What Media Academics Say
Chapter 7: Towards a Praxis-based Media and Journalism Research
Leon Barkho and Ibrahim Saleh
Chapter 8: From the High Ground to the Swamp: A Model for Immersive Journalism Research
Sarah Niblock
Chapter 9: Minority Media as Intercultural Dialogue: Towards a Communicative Praxis
Fackson Banda
Chapter 10: Inside Out/Outside In: (Auto-)Ethnographic Work on the Position of the Newspaper Sub-editor
Astrid Vandendaele
Chapter 11: Photojournalism and the Role of Images as Part of Design and Branding
David Machin and Lydia Polzer
Chapter 12: Notes on a Practice-based Media and Journalism Research from a Critical Cultural Perspective
Marcela Pizzaro
Part III: Who Gets It Right?
Chapter 13: Journalists Do Live in a Parallel Universe: A Response to Practitioner Critiques of Journalism Academics
Jairo Lugo-Ocando
Chapter 14: Linking Theory to Practice: Changing the Approach of Media and Journalism Research
Leon Barkho
Chapter 15: Media Academics versus Media Practitioners: Who Gets It Right?
Leon Barkho