The journalist and the other: on the vestiges of investigation and writing

The journalist and the other: on the vestiges of investigation and writing

Understanding and writing journalistic narratives as developments in a unique relationship with time itself as well as questioning issues intrinsic to the profession is healthy. The current research examines books written by journalists as a space to pursue such understanding. More broadly, we aim t...

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Título de la revista: Brazilian journalism research
Primer autor: Reges Schwaab
Otros autores: Angela Zamin Zamin
Palabras clave traducidas:
Idioma: No especificado
Enlace del documento: https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/813
Tipo de recurso: Documento de revista
Fuente: Brazilian journalism research; Vol 11, No 1 English (Año 2015).
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25200/BJR.v11n1.2015.813
Entidad editora: Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em Jornalismo
Derechos de uso: Reconocimiento - NoComercial - SinObraDerivada (by-nc-nd)
Materias: Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades --> Comunicación
Resumen: Understanding and writing journalistic narratives as developments in a unique relationship with time itself as well as questioning issues intrinsic to the profession is healthy. The current research examines books written by journalists as a space to pursue such understanding. More broadly, we aim to stress the relationship between media narratives with contemporary issues in a lapsed conceptual space. Thus, our examination takes into consideration three works by Portuguese journalist and writer Alexandra Lucas Coelho: Afghan Notebook (2009), Viva Mexico (2013) and Tahrir! The Days of the Revolution (2011), exploring what they tell us about Journalism and its processes of writing and investigating the concepts of time and of the Other.