Shades of Expression : Online Political Journalism in the Post-Colour Revolution Nations.
Roberts, Simon Gwyn.
Shades of Expression : Online Political Journalism in the Post-Colour Revolution Nations. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (202 pages)
Front cover -- Title pages -- Copyright pages -- Contents -- List of illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: The lands of the "semi-free -- Chapter 1: Online political journalism in context: Beyond the "Echo Chamber -- Chapter 2: Deficient media environments: Post-Soviet trajectories in global context -- Chapter 3: Defining terms: Idealised benchmarks of journalistic function -- Chapter 4: Post-colour revolution country overviews -- Chapter 5: Method: The challenges of cross-national comparative media research -- Chapter 6: Evidential: What are the barriers to conventional journalism? -- Chapter 7: Evidential: What is the relationship between online news media, the mainstream press and politics? -- Chapter 8: Evidential: How are minorities covered in the media? -- Chapter 9: Conclusion: The democratising potential of independent "hub" websites -- References -- Back cover.
The Colour Revolutions in the former Soviet Union were arguably the twenty-first century's first successful attempts to overthrow political elites through mass protest and civic society activism. They are of intrinsic interest to media scholars because concepts of media freedom were located at the heart of the protests against semiautocratic post-Communist regimes and have continued to characterise political debate in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. The ideals that underpinned the events were echoed several years later in the Arab world, and both initially involved influential networks of activists ranged against political elites. The events of the Arab Spring were often facilitated and given added impetus by the advances in news media technology which had taken place over the latter half of the decade and which allowed for more effective networked communications and a more open public sphere to thrive, even in autocratic environments. But while the role of evolving media technologies has been extensively analysed and critiqued in the context of the Arab world, its use in the more mature post-Revolution environments of the former Soviet Union has been largely overlooked. This book captures a snapshot of the contemporary role of online journalism in rapidly evolving post-Soviet, post-Colour Revolution political environments, exploring the wider journalistic and political context alongside the use and influence of online news sites. In particular, it aims to fill a gap in the literature by undertaking qualitative work in the post-Colour Revolution nations which seeks to assess the views of active journalists on the role of online political journalism in those environments.
9781908258786
Online journalism.
Citizen journalism.
Journalism -- Ukraine.
Journalism -- Georgia.
Journalism -- Kyrgyzstan.
Journalism -- Armenia.
Electronic books.
PN4784.O62 -- .R634 2013eb
070.4
Shades of Expression : Online Political Journalism in the Post-Colour Revolution Nations. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (202 pages)
Front cover -- Title pages -- Copyright pages -- Contents -- List of illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: The lands of the "semi-free -- Chapter 1: Online political journalism in context: Beyond the "Echo Chamber -- Chapter 2: Deficient media environments: Post-Soviet trajectories in global context -- Chapter 3: Defining terms: Idealised benchmarks of journalistic function -- Chapter 4: Post-colour revolution country overviews -- Chapter 5: Method: The challenges of cross-national comparative media research -- Chapter 6: Evidential: What are the barriers to conventional journalism? -- Chapter 7: Evidential: What is the relationship between online news media, the mainstream press and politics? -- Chapter 8: Evidential: How are minorities covered in the media? -- Chapter 9: Conclusion: The democratising potential of independent "hub" websites -- References -- Back cover.
The Colour Revolutions in the former Soviet Union were arguably the twenty-first century's first successful attempts to overthrow political elites through mass protest and civic society activism. They are of intrinsic interest to media scholars because concepts of media freedom were located at the heart of the protests against semiautocratic post-Communist regimes and have continued to characterise political debate in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. The ideals that underpinned the events were echoed several years later in the Arab world, and both initially involved influential networks of activists ranged against political elites. The events of the Arab Spring were often facilitated and given added impetus by the advances in news media technology which had taken place over the latter half of the decade and which allowed for more effective networked communications and a more open public sphere to thrive, even in autocratic environments. But while the role of evolving media technologies has been extensively analysed and critiqued in the context of the Arab world, its use in the more mature post-Revolution environments of the former Soviet Union has been largely overlooked. This book captures a snapshot of the contemporary role of online journalism in rapidly evolving post-Soviet, post-Colour Revolution political environments, exploring the wider journalistic and political context alongside the use and influence of online news sites. In particular, it aims to fill a gap in the literature by undertaking qualitative work in the post-Colour Revolution nations which seeks to assess the views of active journalists on the role of online political journalism in those environments.
9781908258786
Online journalism.
Citizen journalism.
Journalism -- Ukraine.
Journalism -- Georgia.
Journalism -- Kyrgyzstan.
Journalism -- Armenia.
Electronic books.
PN4784.O62 -- .R634 2013eb
070.4