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Journalism and Emotion

      Journalism and Emotion

       Stephen Jukes

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      © Stephen Jukes 2020

      First published 2020

      Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.

       Library of Congress Control Number: 2019955643

       British Library Cataloguing in Publication data

      A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-5264-9798-7

      ISBN 978-1-5264-9797-0 (pbk)

      Editor: Michael Ainsley

      Editorial assistant: Amber Turner-Flanders

      Production editor: Imogen Roome

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      Cover design: Lisa Harper-Wells

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      Contents

      1  Acknowledgements

      2  About the Author

      3  Introduction: How Emotion Lies at the Heart of Today’s News and Journalism Practice

      4  1 Objectivity and Emotion

      5  2 Journalism and the Rise of Emotion in a Post-truth Society

      6  3 Journalism Practice and Affect

      7  4 Interviewing and Emotion

      8  5 The Herd Instinct

      9  6 Journalism and Trauma

      10  7 Journalists and User-generated Content

      11  Conclusion: The Taboo Has Been Broken, What Next?

      12  References

      13  Index

      Acknowledgements

      They say there is a novel buried deep in every journalist waiting to get out. This volume is certainly no novel, but it is a book that I have been carrying around in my head for at least the past two decades. Its roots lie in more than 20 years of work as a journalist and foreign correspondent around the world for the news agency Reuters. But it is only in the past few years, from the detached vantage point of the academic world, that I have been able to draw my ideas and reflections together into what is hopefully a coherent shape. I still passionately believe in journalism as a force for good, but it is clear, with hindsight, that the events of September 11, 2001, triggered in me a critical distance from the profession. That can only be healthy in today’s tumultuous media landscape, in which many of the certainties of the past have been thrown into question. The Introduction to this book describes how September 11 was a pivotal moment that drove me to stand back and explore the complex relationship between journalism, norms of objectivity and emotion. I would like to express my deep gratitude to all my friends and colleagues at Reuters with whom I covered so many summits, crises and, more often than not, the routine day-to-day stories that we call the news. I owe a particular debt to two – my first editor in the Middle East, the late François Duriaud, the ultimate professional and a legendary figure at Reuters; and his colleague as news editor and later successor as Middle East Editor, Graham Stewart. I learnt the trade from both and look back on those days with great affection. I also owe a debt of gratitude to two outstanding academics at Goldsmiths, University of London: Professors Natalie Fenton and Lisa Blackman. They painstakingly supervised my doctoral thesis, on which this book draws, often late on a Friday afternoon when many would be heading off for a weekend break. Natalie Fenton encouraged me to question journalism’s norms and shook me out of the comfortable world of my past. We did not see eye to eye on regulation of the British press (in the midst of the Leveson Inquiry) but her advice and guidance was invaluable. Lisa Blackman, in the next-door office of the New Academic Building at Goldsmiths, now the Professor Stuart Hall Building, introduced me to the world of affect, in all its (sometimes extreme) variations, opening up new horizons, new authors and a new way of thinking about journalism. At my home institution, Bournemouth University, I would like to thank my colleagues and particularly Barry Richards, one of the pioneering academics working in the field of psychosocial research into politics, culture and media. Further afield, thanks also go to Cardiff University professors Stuart Allan, a former colleague at Bournemouth University, and Karin Wahl-Jorgensen for their support and encouragement. The latter has been at the forefront of academic research into emotion and media and always, it must be said, several steps ahead of me. When I moved into the academic world in 2005, I also found a home in the Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma

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