Reinventing Journalism: Supporting processes of invention and change in media worlds
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- Institutt for informatikk [4929]
Abstract
Reinventing journalism by using the capabilities of the computer as the medium is called for to increasingly reach audiences both online and in mobile contexts. Based on several case studies, this thesis investigates processes of invention and change initiated to meet this call. The main obstacle for reinvention has been difficulties with mobilizing resources for taking the risks inherent in challenging existing conventions for what to make and how. The thesis contributes both to media studies and to technology design fields, by: 1) giving an early account of technically-advanced journalism in newsrooms; 2) undertaking a rare comparison of how processes of invention and change are undertaken in the media worlds of news and documentary film-making; 3) giving a description of a relatively new domain for the technology design fields; 4) developing a model of form-giving with the computer as the medium that relates computation, interactivity and collaboration; and 5) operationalizing the concepts of infrastructure and infrastructuring for researchers willing to engage with processes of reinvention in media worlds.List of papers
Paper 1: Karlsen, Joakim, and Eirik Stavelin. 2014. “Computational Journalism in Norwegian Newsrooms”. Journalism Practice 8 (1): 34–48. The article is included in the thesis. Also available at https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2013.813190 |
Paper 2: Karlsen, Joakim. 2014. “Transmediavendingen i Ny Norsk Uavhengig Dokumentarfilm”. In: Hvor Går Dokumentaren? Nye Tendenser i Film, Fjernsyn Og På Nett, edited by Henrik Grue Bastiansen and Pål Aam, 195–220. Bergen: Fagbokforlaget. The article is included in the thesis with permission from Fagbokforlaget. |
Paper 3: Karlsen, Joakim, Susanne Koch Stigberg, and Jo Herstad. 2016. “Probing Privacy in Practice: Privacy Regulation and Instant Sharing of Video in Social Media When Running”. In Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Advances in Computer-Human Interactions, 29–36. ACHI 2016. Venezia, Italy, Thinkmind. The article is included in the thesis. |
Paper4: Karlsen, Joakim 2016. “Aligning Participation with Authorship: Independent Transmedia Documentary Production in Norway”. VIEW Journal of European Television History and Culture 5 (10): 40–51. The article is included in the thesis. Also available at https://doi.org/10.18146/2213-0969.2016.jethc111 |
Paper 5: Karlsen, Joakim, and Anders Sundnes Løvlie. 2017. “’You Can Dance Your Prototype If You like’: Independent Filmmakers Adapting the Hackathon”. Digital Creativity 28 (3): 224–39. The paper is included in the thesis. The published version is available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14626268.2017.1351992 |