Compassion, Morality, and the MediaOpen University, 2001 - 152 pages * Why do the reports and representations of suffering and misery move us? * What are we likely to do about it and why? * Why do people take part in telethon appeals? Most of us have watched television or read newspapers and been moved to compassion by the suffering and misery that we see. We know that many people suffer thanks to war, famine or environmental catastrophe. But what do the reports and representations of the suffering and misery of others actually mean to media users? Compassion, Morality and the Media seeks to answer this question and offers an engaging narrative through which it becomes possible to think about the role of journalists as moral agents. The author explores the tensions between the intentions of journalists, the horizons of the audience and the priorities of media institutions. This is a book which deals with important issues that have been relatively neglected in the academic study of the media. It is accessible and relevant and opens up a new terrain for research and teaching on the media as a moral force. Students taking undergraduate courses on the media and others with a wider interest in media morality will find it to be compelling reading. |
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Page 17
... present . She is in little doubt that it does exist . To this extent , di Giovanni is seeking to describe the moral horizons of photographers and reporters . She is seeking to establish what is the case . But there is something else ...
... present . She is in little doubt that it does exist . To this extent , di Giovanni is seeking to describe the moral horizons of photographers and reporters . She is seeking to establish what is the case . But there is something else ...
Page 79
... presents them as isolated indi- viduals . At best , the relationships which help to confirm identity are reduced to ... present in the world . It is this inequality that is undoubtedly one of the bases of the common response to reports ...
... presents them as isolated indi- viduals . At best , the relationships which help to confirm identity are reduced to ... present in the world . It is this inequality that is undoubtedly one of the bases of the common response to reports ...
Page 134
... present require us to develop radically new and original ways of think- ing about morality ? Or does the present call upon us to recommit ourselves to the time - honoured codes and emotions of morality precisely because they are ...
... present require us to develop radically new and original ways of think- ing about morality ? Or does the present call upon us to recommit ourselves to the time - honoured codes and emotions of morality precisely because they are ...
Table des matières
COMPASSION FATIGUE AND THE ETHICS OF THE JOURNALISTIC FIELD | 13 |
THE COMPASSION OF THE AUDIENCE | 43 |
LIFTING THE LID ON COMPASSION | 74 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
able Alagiah Alain Finkielkraut appeal audi audience Barker and Brooks Barthes Baudrillard Bauman become Bellah Boccardi Bourdieu broadcast Chapter charity civil society claim CNN effect compassion fatigue concern contemporary context coverage debate Devereux donation donors Dyck and Coldevin ence ethical extent famine feel field of journalistic Finkielkraut George Alagiah gift Gilligan and Wiggins Giovanni Hammock and Charny human ideal identified Ignatieff implies incommensurability individual social actors insofar investment issue jour journalism of attachment journalistic field journalistic practice journalistic production kind Kinnick Live Aid logic low investors MacIntyre Martin Bell Mauss means moral action moral universalism moral voice morality play morally compelling myth nalistic Natsios objective journalism objectivity orientation possible precisely problem question report or representation reports and representations response Riesman Rwanda says sense Shaw Simmel situation comedies social action social and cultural suffering and misery telethon television tend valid viewers virtue Zygmunt Bauman