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      Imagined Audiences : How Journalists Perceive and Pursue the Public How Journalists Perceive and Pursue the Public

      edited_book
      Oxford University Press

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          Abstract

          The news industry faces profound financial instability and public distrust. Many believe the solution to these ongoing crises is for journalists to improve their relationship with their audiences. This raises important questions: How do journalists conceptualize their audiences in the first place? What is the connection between what journalists think about their audiences and what they do to reach them? Perhaps most important, how aligned are these “imagined” audiences with the real ones? Imagined Audiences draws on ethnographic case studies of three news organizations to show how journalists’ assumptions about their audiences shape their approaches to their audiences. In doing so, it examines the role that audiences traditionally have played in journalism, how that role has changed, and what those changes mean for both the profession and the public. It concludes by drawing on audience studies research to compare journalism’s “imagined” audiences with actual observations of news audience behavior. The result is a comprehensive study of both news production and reception at a time when the connection between the two has grown more important than ever.

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          Book
          9780197542590
          9780197542637
          April 15 2021
          March 18 2021
          10.1093/oso/9780197542590.001.0001
          4b391d48-897c-4b46-a8a0-902f5f3b509c
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