Journalistic Passion as Commodity : A Managerial Perspective
Lindén, C.-G., Lehtisaari, K., Grönlund, M., & Villi, M. (2021). Journalistic Passion as Commodity : A Managerial Perspective. Journalism Studies, 22(12), 1701-1719. https://doi.org/10.1080/1461670X.2021.1911672
Published in
Journalism StudiesDate
2021Copyright
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
This article focuses on the role of passion in news journalism from a managerial perspective. The analysis is based on a data set of 40,621 web-based job advertisements obtained from Journalismjobs.com, from the year 2002 to 2017. The quantitative analysis shows that passion has been on the rise as only 4% of the job advertisements in 2002 asked for “passionate” journalists, increasing to almost 16% in 2013. The authors also performed a qualitative analysis of job advertisements mentioning the word “passion” for the periods 2002–2003 and 2017. These advertisements express a shift from a normative role of journalists to journalism as an activity: when mentioned within the context of personal character, the desired temperament of journalists has given way to descriptions of desired behaviour. The normative focus on journalism as an ideal has decreased while the focus on performance—that journalists should feel passionate about reporting and storytelling—has risen dramatically. In the texts, passion emerges as something that can be applied in a range of contexts as a strategic resource. The findings point to commodification of feelings and exploitation of emotional labour in journalism.
...
Publisher
RoutledgeISSN Search the Publication Forum
1461-670XKeywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/101953420
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Additional information about funding
Support for this article was provided by the European Union’s Horizon Research and Innovation Framework Programme under grant agreement No. 825153, project EMBEDDIA (Cross-Lingual Embeddings for Less-Represented Languages in European News Media).License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Proclivity of Sexual Harassment and Blame Attribution in Journalism : Experiential Narratives of Ghanaian Female Journalists
Boateng, Kodwo Jonas Anson; Lauk, Epp (Obercom, 2021)Though the proclivity of sexual-related harassments in African journalism is high, the rates of reporting of these incidences and empirical studies are low. Using a gendered approach, the study presents and exploratory ... -
Pioneers as Peers : How Entrepreneurial Journalists Imagine the Futures of Journalism
Ruotsalainen, Juho; Heinonen, Sirkka; Hujanen, Jaana; Villi, Mikko (Routledge, Taylor & Francis, 2023)The article investigates the futures of journalism that pioneering entrepreneurial journalists anticipate. This comprises the different imaginaries that journalists employ to make sense of journalism’s present potentials, ... -
Dialogic journalism : how can journalists participate in the networks of social innovation?
Heikka, Taneli (University of Jyväskylä, 2017)This thesis asks the question “What is the role of journalism in social innovation?” It explores how journalism is redefined when it engages in the creation of “the new” in society. The study analyzes four cases of ... -
“The War Becomes Personal”: Experiences of Journalists Who Report the Middle East
Myöhänen, Ulriikka (2018)Lähi-itä on jo vuosikymmeniä ollut maailmanpolitiikan keskiössä, ja alueen konfliktin hallitsevat Lähi-idälle varattua palstatilaa länsimaisessa mediassa. Tämän tutkimuksen tavoitteena oli selvittää, millaisia kokemuksia ... -
Journalistic Autonomy as a Professional Value and Element of Journalism Culture: The European Perspective
Lauk, Epp; Harro-Loit, Halliki (University of Southern California's Annenberg Center for Communication, 2017)The current combination of economic recession and info-technological revolution is drastically affecting the working environment of journalists and challenging their autonomy more than ever. This article focuses on how ...