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Journalism's ontology of oscillation: a metamodern perspective.

Anderson, Bissie

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Abstract

This conceptual paper makes the case for a metamodern perspective in the study of digital journalism. Identifying oscillation, the movement in-between opposing poles, as the overarching defining principle of digital journalism’s ontology, the paper argues that we should abandon old tropes related to postmodernism and instead situate journalism's struggles for autonomy and authority within present-day culture's structure of feeling. Metamodernism is defined by "an oscillation between a typically modern commitment and a markedly postmodern detachment", which could be seen in the works of modern artists who "increasingly abandon the aesthetic precepts of deconstruction, parataxis, and pastiche in favour of aesth-ethical notions of reconstruction, myth and metaxis" (Vermeulen & van den Akker, 2010). Moving beyond postmodernist conceptualisations of journalism's struggles over its identity helps shed light on its efforts to reinvent and rebuild itself in the post-truth age, and metamodernism offers a fruitful conceptual lens through which to examine the negotiations between multiple forces and imperatives that vie for power over what journalism is and should be.

Citation

ANDERSON, B. 2020. Journalism's ontology of oscillation: a metamodern perspective. Presented at the 70th ICA (International Communication Association) annual conference (ICA 2020): open communication, 21-25 May 2020, [virtual event].

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name 70th ICA (International Communication Association) annual conference (ICA 2020): open communication
Conference Location [virtual event]
Start Date May 21, 2020
End Date May 25, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 14, 2022
Publicly Available Date Sep 12, 2023
Keywords Digital journalism; Metamodern; Authenticity; Aesthetics
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1752921
Additional Information The file accompanying this record contains both a text file and slide presentation which have been incorporated into a single file.

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