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ARTICLES

Gone, But Not Forgotten

Memories of journalistic deviance as metajournalistic discourse

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Read on this site (15)

Danford Zirugo. (2023) Negative Memory Mobilization: Moments of Journalistic Failure as an Interpretive Lens. Journalism Practice 17:3, pages 492-507.
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Kelsey N. Whipple, Shane M. Graber & Vincent Peña. (2022) “We F—ing Got Osuna”: Examining the Maintenance of Patriarchy and Journalistic Routines in A Major League Baseball Clubhouse. Journalism Studies 23:16, pages 2138-2156.
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Erica Salkin & Kevin Grieves. (2022) The “major mea culpa:” Journalistic Discursive Techniques When Professional Norms are Broken. Journalism Studies 23:9, pages 1096-1113.
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Andrew Duffy & Megan Knight. (2019) Don’t be Stupid. Journalism Studies 20:7, pages 932-951.
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Qun Wang, Philip M. Napoli & Yi Ma. (2018) Problems and Solutions for American Political Coverage. Journalism Practice 12:10, pages 1241-1258.
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Michael Buozis & Brian Creech. (2018) Reading News as Narrative. Journalism Studies 19:10, pages 1430-1446.
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David Asa Schwartz & Dan Berkowitz. (2018) “The Best Minute and a Half of Audio”. Journalism Practice 12:4, pages 440-455.
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Matt Carlson. (2018) Facebook in the News. Digital Journalism 6:1, pages 4-20.
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Brian Creech & Shannon Rooney. (2017) “Death of The New Republic”. Journalism Studies 18:11, pages 1363-1380.
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Scott Eldridge II. (2017) Hero or Anti-Hero?. Digital Journalism 5:2, pages 141-158.
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Andrew L. Mendelson & Brian Creech. (2016) “Make Every Frame Count”. Digital Journalism 4:4, pages 512-529.
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Juliette De Maeyer & Florence Le Cam. (2015) The Material Traces of Journalism. Digital Journalism 3:1, pages 85-100.
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Martin Conboy & Scott A. Eldridge$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (2014) Morbid Symptoms. Journalism Studies 15:5, pages 566-575.
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Articles from other publishers (14)

Michael Buozis. (2023) Targeting the trades, press associations, and J-schools: Tobacco industry mapping and shaping of metajournalistic discourses. Journalism, pages 146488492311665.
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Maria Bendix Wittchen. (2023) Between harm and sensationalism: Court reporters negotiating objectivity when reflecting on ethical dilemmas in the Submarine Murder Trial. Nordicom Review 44:1, pages 106-122.
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Ruth Moon. (2021) When Journalists See Themselves as Villains: The Power of Negative Discourse. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 98:3, pages 790-807.
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Gregory Perreault & Tim Vos. (2019) Metajournalistic discourse on the rise of gaming journalism. New Media & Society 22:1, pages 159-176.
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Marina A. Hendricks & Ryan J. Thomas. (2017) What’s in a Name? Journalistic Boundary Work and a High School Newspaper’s Effort to Ban “Redskin”. Journalism & Mass Communication Educator 73:4, pages 454-468.
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Tai Neilson. (2016) ‘I don’t engage’: Online communication and social media use among New Zealand journalists. Journalism 19:4, pages 536-552.
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Matthias ReversMatthias Revers. 2017. Contemporary Journalism in the US and Germany. Contemporary Journalism in the US and Germany 1 18 .
Matt Carlson. (2016) Metajournalistic Discourse and the Meanings of Journalism: Definitional Control, Boundary Work, and Legitimation. Communication Theory 26:4, pages 349-368.
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Francis LF Lee & Joseph Man Chan. (2016) Collective memory mobilization and Tiananmen commemoration in Hong Kong. Media, Culture & Society 38:7, pages 997-1014.
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Juliette De Maeyer & Avery E Holton. (2016) Why linking matters: A metajournalistic discourse analysis. Journalism 17:6, pages 776-794.
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Matthias Revers. 2016. The Crisis of Journalism Reconsidered. The Crisis of Journalism Reconsidered 228 246 .
Matt Carlson. 2016. The Crisis of Journalism Reconsidered. The Crisis of Journalism Reconsidered 135 152 .
Jennifer Noe. (2015) Case studies and pervasive instruction. Reference Services Review 43:4, pages 706-721.
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Matt Carlson. (2014) When news sites go native: Redefining the advertising–editorial divide in response to native advertising. Journalism 16:7, pages 849-865.
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