Mon, Oct 22, 2018, 05:30 AM - Tue, Oct 23, 2018, 05:30 AM
https://globalstf.org/
Today’s media
exist in an age of challenging dichotomies: truth versus 'post-truth', facts versus
'alternative facts’ and news versus ‘fake news'. If media practitioners find
this evolving environment perplexing, what of their audiences? The media
landscape increasingly comprises traditional and new media - and media
producers range from experienced professionals who publish or broadcast their
work widely, to relative novices who use the internet and social media to
access niche audiences. Regulated and unregulated media compete for audiences,
but what implications for trust are there to the monetisation of falsehood?
Mass media are found in almost every area of our
daily lives and the proliferation of platforms has increased their ubiquity, as
well as their potential as agents of social change, with possible influences on
culture, language, employment, health, social welfare, development, politics
and religion. Social media enable dialogues to emerge, seemingly from nowhere,
and create impact almost everywhere, through the ongoing evolution of the
‘public sphere’. These trends are observable almost worldwide, and deserve
recognition and analysis.
Through the divergence of sources and platforms,
and the convergence of content and practices, many similarities and differences
persist between information, entertainment and communication in today's mass
media and social media alike. These various media interactions might influence
societies in a number of ways and evidently impact social relations through the
way we communicate with one another. Drawing academically-robust conclusions
requires an understanding of this complex, highly-mediatized world, and
encourages interdisciplinary scholarship, critical reading, data analysis, and
an examination of the impact of the various media.
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