In his 50-year career, Bill Kovach has been chief of the New York Times Washington Bureau, served as editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and curated the Nieman Fellowships at Harvard University. He is founding chairman of the Committee of Concerned Journalists and senior counselor for the Project for Excellence in Journalism. In 2004, he was named to the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies at Middle Tennessee State University.
A journalist for more than 30 years, Tom Rosenstiel worked as chief congressional correspondent for Newsweek and as a media critic for the Los Angeles Times and MSNBC's The News With Brian Williams. His books include Strange Bedfellows and We Interrupt This Newscast. Rosenstiel is vice chairman of the Committee of Concerned Journalists, and director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism.
Together, Kovach and Rosenstiel have authored two books: The Elements of Journalism, winner of the 2002 Goldsmith Book Prize from Harvard University, and Warp Speed: America in the Age of Mixed Media.
Amid the hand-wringing over the death of "true journalism" in the Internet Age—the din of bloggers, the echo chamber of Twitter, the predominance of Wikipedia—veteran journalists and media critics Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel have written a pragmatic, serious-minded guide to navigating the twenty-first century media terrain. Yes, old authorities are being dismantled, new ones created, and the very nature of knowledge has changed. But seeking the truth remains the purpose of journalism—and the object for those who consume it. How do we discern what is reliable? How do we determine which facts (or whose opinions) to trust? Blur provides a road map, or more specifically, reveals the craft that has been used in newsrooms by the very best journalists for getting at the truth. In an age when the line between citizen and journalist is becoming increasingly unclear, Blur is a crucial guide for those who want to know what's true.
Ways of Skeptical Knowing—Six Essential Tools for Interpreting theNews
1. What kind of content am I encountering?
2. Is the information complete? If not, what's missing?
3. Who or what are the sources and why should I believe them?
4. What evidence is presented and how was it tested or vetted?
5. What might bean alternative explanation or understanding?
6. Am I learning what I need?
發表於2025-03-09
Blur 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
信息超載、碎片化、淺層化…… 這些詞匯大傢應該耳熟能詳。 還有,信息超載造成的各種心理癥狀也隨後被重新命名:信息焦慮、信息疲勞癥候群、分析癱瘓…… 聽起來都很嚇人。 實際上,這些名詞的最大推動力,是那些打造暢銷書的市場欲望。 當然也不是空穴來風。 還是基於一定的...
評分 評分這是一本告訴我們在信息爆炸時代,普通公眾如何讓去判斷新聞的可信度,辨彆不同類型的新聞的特點與陷阱的書。說白一點,就是簡單地教我們如何提高自己的媒介素養。作者提到瞭常見的四種新聞類型:確證式、斷言式、肯定式、利益集團式新聞,並就這四種類型新聞的特點分析瞭每種...
評分自從互聯網進入人們的生活後,世界似乎變得越來越不太平。雖然我們知道,這可能是被網絡延伸的神經係統在瑣碎而繁多的信息挑逗下産生的一種幻覺,世界可能一直就如這般“不太平”,但是這依然把一個問題推到瞭我們麵前:我們該相信什麼? 比爾·科瓦奇和湯姆·羅森斯蒂爾的《...
圖書標籤: society 新聞學 傳播學 media communication
Blur 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載