While numerous studies view the internet as a patron of internationalism and public empowerment, this comparative study of leading news websites in nine nations shows that online news is strongly nation-centred, and much more inclined to cite the voices of authority than those of civil society and the individual citizen. Online news is very similar, in these respects, to newspaper and television news. This convergence is due to the way in which leading media conglomerates have extended their hegemony across technologies. It also reflects the constraints exerted by the wider societal context across all media.
Internet revolution revisited : a comparative study of online news / J. Curran, S. Coen, T. Aalberg, K. Hayashi, P. K. Jones, S. Papathanassopoulos, D. Rowe, R. Tiffen, S. Splendore. - In: MEDIA CULTURE & SOCIETY. - ISSN 0163-4437. - 7:35(2013 Jul), pp. 880-897.
Internet revolution revisited : a comparative study of online news
S. Splendore
2013
Abstract
While numerous studies view the internet as a patron of internationalism and public empowerment, this comparative study of leading news websites in nine nations shows that online news is strongly nation-centred, and much more inclined to cite the voices of authority than those of civil society and the individual citizen. Online news is very similar, in these respects, to newspaper and television news. This convergence is due to the way in which leading media conglomerates have extended their hegemony across technologies. It also reflects the constraints exerted by the wider societal context across all media.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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