Stuart Allan
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Digital divisions
Online reporting and the network society
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In taking Castells's theorisation of the network society as its point of departure, this chapter situates online journalism within the informational politics of capitalism. It argues that to grasp what is at stake in this 'battle for freedom' across the digital divide, we must necessarily account for the ways in which the news media are shaping democratic deliberation and debate across what are ever more globalised public spheres. The chapter examines some of the ways in which ordinary citizens are opening up alternative spaces for new types of reporting to emerge. It also examines the online reporting of the tragic events of September 11, 2001 and, the use of warblogs in covering the war in Iraq. Journalists' routine, everyday choices about what to report - how best to do it, and why - necessarily implicate them in a discursive politics of mediation in what are increasingly globalised public spheres.

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