Russian Regional Journalism  Paid

Struggle and Survival in the Heartland

by Elina Erzikova (Author), Wilson Lowrey (Author)
©2020, Textbook, X, 204 Pages
Media & Communication

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Russian Regional Journalism: Struggle and Survival in the Heartland takes an intimate look at the enormous challenges and small victories experienced by local Russian journalists across the post-perestroika and Putin eras. The book examines 13 years of journalists’ struggles for independence and meaning as they weigh their professional goals and community obligations against their growing dependence on local elite. Russia’s sub-national levels—its provinces and communities—remain understudied but important. Local newspapers are the only means by which news reaches many rural Russians, and Russia’s "heartland" regions are a significant source of support for the current national regime. The book contributes importantly to our understanding of Russian journalism, and to our understanding of local journalism generally, an increasingly vulnerable institution in countries around the world. Russian Regional Journalism seeks answers to a number of questions: How do challenging political-economic environments constrain and guide the ways Russian journalists imagine their roles and do their work? Can journalists represent their regions in meaningful, distinct ways, and are they seeking autonomy or mere survival? How does local Russian journalism fit within the global context of local journalism? Russian Regional Journalism will serve as a valuable companion text for senior-level or graduate courses on Russian media and culture, global media, local journalism, media production, and media sociology. The book will also be of value to anyone interested in journalism’s ongoing challenges in a diverse, changing world.

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the Author
  • About the Book
  • Dedication
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Section I: Russian Regional Journalism and Its Contexts
    • Chapter One: Introduction
    • Chapter Two: Russia’s Regions and Regional Journalism: The Current Context
    • Chapter Three: Local Russian Journalism as a Social Space: Field and Ecology Perspectives
  • Section II: Findings: The Three Regions, Their Journalism, Journalists and Communities
    • Chapter Four: Russian Regional Journalism and Its Environments
    • Chapter Five: Regional Journalists: Scarcity, Divisiveness and Persistence
    • Chapter Six: Russian Regional Journalists in a Digital Era
    • Chapter Seven: Journalists’ Shifting, Versatile Roles
    • Chapter Eight: Cracks in the System: Journalists’ Pursuit of Autonomy
    • Chapter Nine: Conclusions: Daunting Challenges and Ways Forward
  • Appendix: Methodology
  • Index
Pages:
X, 204
Year:
2020
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781433171338 (Active)
ISBN (PAPERBACK):
9781433171345 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781433171369 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781433171352 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Oxford, Wien, 2020. X, 204 pp., 2 tables.

Elina Erzikova is Professor of Public Relations at Central Michigan University, U.S. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Alabama, U.S. She is a Fellow of the Plank Center for Leadership in Public Relations at the University of Alabama and has published in a variety of scholarly journals.

Wilson Lowrey is Professor and Reese Phifer Fellow at the University of Alabama, U.S. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Georgia, U.S. He is co-editor of Changing the News: The Forces Shaping Journalism in Uncertain Times and co-author of Media Management: A Casebook Approach.

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