Challenging journalistic objectivity: How journalists of color call for a reckoning

Author:

Schmidt Thomas R1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, San Diego

Abstract

This study explores how journalists in the United States advocated for a stronger affirmation of social justice in journalism following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. Analyzing the metajournalistic discourse in trade publications ( Niemanlab, Columbia Journalism Review, Poynter) and on the web, this study traces how journalists and commentators challenged the professional norm of journalistic objectivity. In particular, it examines how journalistic objectivity became identified as a problematic concept, what journalists were suggesting as its alternative, and how the journalistic establishment responded. This study identifies three dimensions of criticisms and connects these to disagreements within specific modalities of journalistic objectivity (procedural, ethical, ideological). Ultimately, this analysis locates an ideological struggle in which fundamental moral norms of journalism are not only being vigorously contested but also rearticulated and renegotiated.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication

Reference65 articles.

1. Alamo-Pastrana C, Hoynes W (2020) Racialization of news: constructing and challenging professional journalism as “white media.” Humanity & Society 44(1): 67–91.

2. Alsop J (2020a) “What John Lewis can teach the press.” Columbia Journalism Review. July 20. Review June 29. https://longform.org/posts/longform-podcast-398-dean-baquet

3. Anand A (2020) “How 13 local news publishers have responded to the Black Lives Matter demonstrations. Poynter, June 19. https://www.poynter.org/business-work/2020/how-13-local-news-publishers-have-responded-to-the-black-lives-matter-demonstrations/

4. Anderson CW (2021) ‘A journalism of fear.’ Journalism 22(8): 1912–1928.

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