Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Young female journalists - a favourite topic of mine...
Yesterday the newest edition of Momentum Quarterly was published.
And it contains a peer-reviewed article in German by Martina and me.
We are proud to have it published in a starting open access journal.
Look it up: "Jung, weiblich und Journalistin: Endstation Prekrariat?"
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Oxford and journalism ethics
Just a short heads up...
We - that is Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff and me, Dimitri Prandner - were at the" Journalism Ethics: Individual, institutional or cultural?" and presented our paper that gave insight to some of the more pressing issues in Austrian journalism regarding ethics and regulation.
Weblink: Confernce HP
Paper is currently under review and thus we are not able to hand it out at this time, but the sildes are available upon request.
Friday, July 6, 2012
Crossroads in Cultural Studies 2012 - Paris
I spent the first week of July 2012 in Paris and at the 'Crossroads in Cultural Studies'-Conference of the ACS and presented my paper 'How do mediatized interpretations of `traumatic‘ events emerge in the periphery – The example of 9/11'.
While I called the paper 'The
Emergence of Cultural Traumata in Center and Periphery – The Example of 9/11'
in my abstract it felt like the final content of it was not fitting this
working title and I tried to focus on the depiction of the terrorism and how
journalists in Austria - the periphery region in my study - worked on the topic
of 9/11 during the last 10 years.
It was great to meet and talk with Irena Carpentier
Reifova, who I had a short, but nice talk with about the role of individuals
during the formation of remembered versions of the past. It was both good
feedback and validation of problems that are currently wandering around in my
mind.
Further it was great to see Seong bin Hwang again, who
I had met last year on the IAMCR in Istanbul.
I was very glad that we presented in
the same panel and had the chance to talk for a bit. His work on the medial
representations of the anti-atom movement post Fukujima was very
interesting.
Further great food for thought included the panel
'Media Studies and Communication Sciences - Intellectual Dialogues Transgressing
a Banal Conflict' where it once more became clear to me that I’m a sociologist
and will always stay one, even when my topics may be about media or history or
politics.
And the panel ‘Beyond the Sociology
of tastes: Power and Postlegitimacy’ led to me reflecting Bourdieu once more.
Definitly have the need to talk with several other researchers about this, but
I was indeed moved…
And here a few links regarding the conference and the paper:
Conference HP: Crossroads 2012
Original abstract can be found in: Crossroads in Cultural
Studies – Book of Abstracts (2012), p. 333
My presentation: Crossroads Presentation as PDF
(proceedings/paper available on demand)
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Identity, changes and challenges of the profession in the 21st Century
My good friend and valued colleague Martina Lettner presented our paper 'Young, female and
journalist: less money, less job opportunities, less fame ‐ and still happy?' in Chile at the end of June 2012.
Because of the terrific Crossroads conference I had no chance to travel to Chile, but as always working with Martina has been a real joy and I hope that our next presentation will give us the chance to finally do one presentation together.
Abstract:
A growing number of people are living in media democracies, which are largely depending on an informed and responsible public. Therefore the media function as a central link between the powerful players within a society and its less powerful members. Yet the contents of the media are created by journalists, who are part of society and individuals themselves, working under specific conditions.
Thus not only their work, but they themselves are crucial for the constitution and well-being of society and the presented paper deals with the case of the Austrian journalistic field. There the sector faced remarkable changes during the last four decades, which not only led to women entering the field, but heavily increasing the inequality within Austrian journalism, up to the point when it became undeniable. Especially young female members of the journalistic field are doubly unprivileged compared to elder male members as a recent empirical research done by the University of Salzburg in 2010 found out. The theory of the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu is employed to display the structure of the inequality and its reasons. Guided interviews with female journalists in Austria (conducted for this paper) display their knowledge of the inequality, their awareness of the involved risks for the media democracy, and their coping strategies. Thus it becomes necessary to discuss ways to restructure the institutional boundaries that are currently reinforcing inequality. A possible proposal is based on the idea that governmental funds and sponsoring should be specifically tied to providing equal conditions for young journalist within the individual enterprises, while putting less emphasis on creating artificial networks, for the excluded groups.
Conference HP: official Periodismo chile 2012 Homepage
Our presentation: Periodismo chile 2012 Presentation as PDF
(proceedings/paper available on demand)
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
6. Forschungsforum der österreichischen Fachhochschulen

Our paper will be later on published in a collected volume with the title: "Übermacht der grauen Schreiber" and I will provide the associated bibliographic info later on, that you can look it up.
It is part of my work that concentrates on the sociology of work in the field of journalism and I'm enjoying Martina's more journalistically informed approach very much.
Copyright for the image lie with the associated copyright holders.
Friday, March 30, 2012
First peer-reviewed Article form the 'Journalismus im Wandel'
The article 'WE USED TO BE QUEENS AND NOW WE ARE SLAVES' by Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff and me has been published by 'Journalism Practice'.
It is online and can be accessed under:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17512786.2012.667276
The first project based, peer-reviewed article I have written with others since I joined the University of Salzburg. We had it a long way coming and as our journalism practice based projects are now in it's second funded phase, I hope we will have the chance to get some writting done.
Cheers! Thanks to Roman Hummel and Susanne Kirchhoff for welcoming me to such a great team.
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