民族国家与新闻业

S. Rao
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引用次数: 1

摘要

民族国家的概念在历史上被定义为拥有某种领土和政治自决权的民族;亲和力:文化、语言或宗教上的亲和力;经济独立。最近的全球化力量使民族国家越来越容易受到资本、公司和/或更强大的国家的影响和依赖。民族国家在全球范围内的这种整合也导致政治行为者改变方向,寻求民族民族主义议程,利用种族、民族、宗教、性别、种姓和其他身份标志的差异来煽动恐惧,或抵御一个国家公民在经济、文化和环境方面的错位。随着民族国家的重新配置,记者们面临着严峻的挑战。这些挑战包括作为分裂力量的新媒体技术的兴起和种族民族主义的兴起。研究表明,新媒体平台不仅扩大了谁可以创造内容的定义,而且扩大了所涵盖的主题范围。另一方面,积极的机会被非媒体因素——历史、政治、经济和社会分歧——不仅继续决定新媒体的传播和采用,而且还决定其影响力这一现实所破坏;每个国家都有自己的文化方程式和社会历史足迹,新媒体被强加于此。记者作为国家媒体系统的一部分,越来越发现自己在一个与不受管制的技术和超国家信息格局竞争的环境中工作。新民族主义者宣扬的一个核心信念是反媒体偏见,认为所有新闻在性质和内容上都是左倾或“自由”的,因此容易受到批评和审查。这种种族民族主义叙事的缓解是全球新闻的模式,它使跨国信息共享成为可能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Nation-State and Journalism
The concept of nation-state has historically been defined as peoples having some manner of territorial and political self-determination; cultural, linguistic, or religious affinity; and economic independence. Recent forces of globalization have made the nation-state increasingly vulnerable to and dependent on capital, corporations, and/or more powerful states. Such integration of the nation-state in the global world has also led political actors to reverse course and seek ethno-nationalist agendas where differences in race, ethnicity, religion, gender, caste, and other identity markers are used to inflame fears or defend against economic, cultural, and environmental dislocation among a nation’s citizens. Journalists face critical challenges as the nation-state gets reconfigured. These challenges include the rise of new media technology as a force of division and the rise of ethno-nationalism. Research shows that new media platforms expanded not only the definition of who can create content but also the range of topics covered. Positive opportunities, alternately, are undermined by the reality that non-media factors—historical, political, economic, and social divisions—continue to determine not only the diffusion and adoption of new media but also its influence; each nation has its own cultural equations and socio-historical footprints on which new media gets imposed. Journalists, as part of national media systems, increasingly find themselves operating in an environment where they are competing with non-regulated technologies and supra-national information landscape. A core belief propagated by new ethno-nationalists is an anti-media bias, where all news is perceived to be left leaning or “liberal” in nature and content, and therefore open to criticism and censorship. The reprieve from such narratives of ethno-nationalism is the model of global journalism, which makes possible transnational information sharing.
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