Langbeschreibung
Mediated Discourse as Social Interaction makes an explicit link between media studies and social interactionalist discursive research where previously the two fields of study have been treated as separate disciplines. The text presents an integrated theory illustrated by ample concrete examples, bringing together the latest research in these two fields. It offers a critique to the sender-receiver model implicit in media studies, and argues for an analysis of media discourse as social interaction, on the one hand among journalists and newsmakers as a community of practice, and among readers and viewers as a spectating community of practice on the other. The book also argues for a coherent and interdiscursive methodology for the ethnographic study of the role of the news media in the social construction of identity and is based on a considerable body of ethnographic and textual analysis of both print and television news media.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
PrefaceSection I: The Primacy of Social Interation in Discourse1. Mediated action as social practiceSection II: Sites of Engagement2. Maxims of stance: Social practices in the interactive construction of business telephone calls3. Acts of reading and watching: Observation as social interaction4. News-stands, handbills, photographs and living rooms as stages for the construction of personInterlude: Mediated TransactionsSection III: The Discursive Construction of the Person in the News Media5. Television journalists6. Newspaper journalists7. Newspmakers in newspaper and televisionSection IV: Media Studies and Social Interaction8. Interdiscursivity and identity9. A social interactional perspective on ethnographic studies of mediaReferences