Aux frontières de l'animal: mises en scène et réflexivité
In: Travaux de sciences sociales 218
5 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Travaux de sciences sociales 218
In: Le temps des médias: revue d'histoire, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 142-155
ISSN: 2104-3671
Résumé Lorsque fait divers et politique-people se rencontrent, c'est toute la machine médiatique qui s'emballe. Une approche narratologique permet de pointer les enjeux qui se dessinent en filigrane du croisement explosif de ces deux genres médiatiques. Ceux-ci sont ici étudiés en tant qu'hybrides, puisqu'ils relèvent à la fois du domaine de l'information et de celui du divertissement. Effets de fiction, personnalisation et enrayements de la configuration temporelle dans les récits sont notamment problématisés.
In: Media, Culture & Society, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 599-618
ISSN: 1460-3675
In this article, we define the notion of 'celebrity news', emphasizing the fact that the portrayal of film stars embodies the imitable and the inimitable and, consequently, points towards values. In that context, we discuss the results of a thematic content analysis of a wide corpus of the daily and weekly European, French-speaking printed media to reveal which values are highlighted in celebrity news; we also compare these results with the contemporary values which emerge from recent European and global surveys of values. We then compare the various types of printed media. Finally, we focus on a specific aspect emerging from the main content analysis: the 'meltdown' or 'fall from grace', which records the decline of a star figure. Such narratives are good examples of syncretism in values, in which very contradictory attributes in celebrities are made to coexist, yet in which the subversive aspect of such a confrontation is passed over. We conclude by showing that the widespread negotiation of different values perceptible in reporting on celebrity figures is a sign of an era of change and re-evaluation, and therefore deserving of study.
Special Issue: Comparing Journalistic Cultures ; Canada, Belgium and Switzerland are multicultural countries with several similarities including having French as a minority language. The trio also shares similar media landscapes, systems and approaches to journalism to those of other Western European and Northern American countries. These commonalities offer an opportunity to probe for the possibility of a language-based differentiation in journalists' professional identities. Our comparative analysis of Worlds of Journalism Study data suggests that francophone journalists in our three countries have much more in common than not with their other-language peers. However, the francophone journalists seem more likely to identify with a politicized role that includes agenda-setting, citizen-motivation and scrutinizing power, and less likely to be driven by attracting and satisfying audiences. A différence francophone exists, but it is modest.
BASE