Valuing Subjectivity in Journalism: Bias, Emotions, and Self-Interest As Tools in Arts Reporting

Valuing Subjectivity in Journalism: Bias, Emotions, and Self-Interest As Tools in Arts Reporting

Original Article Journalism Valuing subjectivity in journalism: Bias, emotions, and self-interest as tools in arts reporting Phillipa Chong McMaster University, Canada Abstract This article examines the meanings and norms surrounding subjectivity across traditional and new forms of cultural journalism. While the ideal of objectivity is key to American journalism and its development as a profession, recent scholarship and new media developments have challenged the dominance of objectivity as a professional norm. This article begins with the understanding that subjectivity is an intractable part of knowing (and reporting on) the world around us to build our understanding of different modes of subjectivity and how these animate journalistic practices. Taking arts reporting, specifically reviewing, as a case study, the analysis draws on interviews with 40 book reviewers who write for major American newspapers, including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, and prominent blogs. Findings reveal how emotions, bias, and self-interest are salient – sometimes as vice and sometimes as virtue – across the workflow of critics writing for traditional print outlets and book blogs and that these differences can be conceptualized as different epistemic styles. Keywords Blogs, emotion, literary journalism, newspapers, online media, practice, subjectivity/ objectivity Introduction Objectivity has long been the gold standard in American journalism and was key to its development into a profession (Benson and Neveu, 2005; Schudson, 1976). Yet Corresponding author: Phillipa Chong, Department of Sociology, McMaster University, 609 Kenneth Taylor Hall, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4M4, Canada. Email: [email protected] Chong 2 scholars have complicated the picture by pointing to the unattainability of objectivity as an ideal with some noting the increasing acceptance of subjectivity across different forms of journalism (Tumber and Prentoulis, 2003; Wahl-Jorgensen, 2012, 2013; Zelizer, 2009b). Specifically, the current media landscape, with its new technological affordances (Ottovordemgentschenfelde, 2016; Rettberg, 2008) and organizational structures (Lowrey, 2006) including blogs and other forms of online reporting, is facilitating more personalized, participatory forms of journalism, which seem at odds with the traditional ‘paradigm of objectivity’ (Hackett, 2009; Reese, 1990). In examining the relationship between traditional and new forms of journalism, scholars have come to mixed conclusions. On the one hand, some scholars have found evidence of blogs promoting alternative – and sometimes oppositional – journalistic values and practices compared to traditional journalism (Boczkowski, 2005; Perlmutter and Schoen, 2007; Turner, 2010). On the other hand, many studies have observed various degrees of overlap in practices across new and traditional forms of journalism, suggesting a more complementary relationship between the two (Blaagaard, 2013; Garden, 2016; Reese et al., 2007; Singer, 2005; Vos et al., 2012). Many studies take the analytical approach of treating traditional journalistic values as the norm from which new media practices deviate (Deuze et al., 2008; Mitchelstein and Boczkowski, 2009); for example, a study might consider to what extent bloggers and journalists working in other forms of new media stray from the traditional journalistic norms associated with objectivity (Agarwal and Barthel, 2015; De Zúñiga et al., 2011). I offer a different analytical approach. Rather than making distinctions in terms of how traditional and new media journalists regard objectivity, for example, as a standard of traditional journalism, I begin with the understanding that subjectivity is an intractable part of how we know the world. And I examine the different ways subjectivity manifests and animates traditional and new media reporting of the same. To do so, the article focuses on how subjectivity is understood by book reviewers as a specific form of cultural journalism. Book reviewers are an ideal case study because subjectivity is largely understood as inseparable from the task of reporting on arts and culture (Harries and Wahl-Jorgensen, 2007; Jaakkola, 2015). And in the realm of fiction reviewing, critics cannot deny subjectivity as illegitimate and must instead develop norms for incorporating it into their work (Chong, 2013). Furthermore, the realm of cultural journalism, like other journalistic fields, has been transformed and challenged by the growth of new media reporting in blogs and other online venues. This enables us to examine how subjectivity is understood, and perhaps handled differently, across forms of journalism. Hence, this article addresses two questions: (1) how do the norms of subjectivity operate? And (2) what can this teach us about the changing relation between blogging and traditional forms of journalism? The multiple modes of subjectivity The unattainability of objectivity as an ideal in journalism is well established. Even if fact-based reporting remains a popular benchmark of good journalism, media scholars have pointed out that news-making is intrinsically selective, partial, and thereby subjective in its practice (Gamson, 1989; Tuchman, 1972). Recent work has Chong 3 begun empirically investigating how subjectivity can co-exist with, if not complement, objective journalistic practices. What studies in this vein have shown is that more than being tolerated, infusing journalism with the emotional (as opposed to factual reporting) can enhance journalistic imperatives of engaging readers and communicating information. A particularly striking example of the embrace of subjectivity comes from WahlJorgensen’s (2012, 2013) studies of Pulitzer prize–winning journalism. Wahl-Jorgensen finds that these highly legitimated journalistic pieces frequently employ emotionality – often understood as a foil to rational fact-based journalism – to create more engaging reporting and to more effectively convey information. She concludes that not only does the inclusion of emotions not challenge the quality or claims to objectivity of the stories produced, but it can also be used to enhance the legitimacy of the journalist. She argues, ‘subjectivity is now a deeply embedded tool of the journalistic profession’ (WahlJorgensen, 2013: 317). There are specific rules and parameters by which subjectivity is legitimately incorporated into journalism, however. Pantti (2010) examines the use of emotionality in television reporting and finds that, while there is openness to emotions as a way of facilitating communication of information, there are still right and wrong ways to incorporate emotions. For example, the skillful inclusion of emotions expressed by sources or informants could enhance the story being reported. But Pantti (2010) explains, ‘the idea of journalists themselves being a locus of emotion was commonly rejected’ (p. 176; emphasis added). Therefore, while subjectivity – including emotionality – may be an increasingly recognized and accepted part of journalistic practice, the subjectivity of the journalist as part of the journalistic process of writing is still perceived as being at odds with ‘quality reporting’. I argue, however, that we can benefit from studying not just rules for wielding subjectivity as a rhetorical tool for building compelling news stories but as an intrinsic part of news-making as an epistemic practice. I offer that it is useful to conceptualize the different ways that subjectivity is deployed as comprising distinct epistemic styles (cf. Maienschein, 1991). This refers to different approaches to solving problems related to knowledge-making. The present concern is epistemic insomuch as debates about subjectivity in journalism are fundamentally about the appropriate means by which we process and produce information about the world around us. And these norms coalesce into distinctive stylized representations of the self as active in the knowledge-making process across traditional print and new media arts journalism. This approach builds upon studies in the sociology of knowledge pointing to subjectivity as part of the knowledge-making process in fields where objectivity is prized, including law (Clair and Winter, 2016; Jasanoff, 2011) and science (Daston and Galison, 2007; Langfeldt, 2004; Travis and Collins, 1991). However, many studies have been content with offering what Shapin (2012) describes as a ‘dustbin’ conception of subjectivity, which ‘holds the heterogeneous bits and pieces of whatever it is that makes trouble for objectivity-stories’ (p. 3).1 That is, previous studies have stopped short of precisely articulating the specific modes of subjectivity and how they operate in knowledge-making. This article attempts to redress this by attending to norms for inclusion of 4 Journalism subjectivity in reporting: What are some of its different forms? And what are the norms surrounding its deployment? A review of studies of journalistic objectivity reveals at least three modes of subjectivity relevant for examination: bias, emotions, and self-interest. Bias This refers to prejudices or inferences based on individual assumptions rather than the ‘reality’ of a situation and is tied to norms of fairness and representation in journalism (Kovach and Rosenstiel, 2001). Social psychological studies suggest that we all carry prejudices or biases in the form of cultural schemas (Fiske, 1993; Ridgeway, 2013). A common example of prejudice or bias in reporting concerns political motivations

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    18 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us