演员网络理论与新闻学

Victor Wiard
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引用次数: 3

摘要

行动者网络理论(ANT)是一种将社会现象视为网络效应的社会学研究方法。这种方法侧重于网络内部互动随时间的演变,对于研究变化的情况、不稳定的群体和不断发展的实践(如新闻业的当前发展)很有用。新闻是一种混乱而复杂的社会实践,涉及各种行动者、机构和技术,其中一些处于危机状态,或者由于数字化而正在经历快速变化。ANT在新闻学研究中获得了势头,研究人员分析记者与他们每天接触的各种代理人(例如,技术,机构,受众,其他新闻生产者)的关系以及新闻生产,流通和使用之间的关系。ANT实践者使用一组简单的概念,称为基础语言,它允许他们交换想法并比较解释,同时让他们正在研究的参与者发展他们自己的概念范围(即,用他们自己的话说话)。这些概念包括行动者、行动者网络、必经通道点和翻译。ANT还提出了一套供研究人员遵循的原则。这些包括将所有实体视为现象的参与者(例如,人们可以让其他人做事情,物体,如计算机或机构,也可以),并跟踪行为者,因为他们追踪与他人的联系。因此,使用这种方法的新闻学者进行定性研究,关注特定技术在网络或情况中的位置,跟踪涉及的对象和内容以及实体如何连接。他们收集的数据包括制作的内容,对新闻制作的直接观察,或在案件结束期间或之后的采访陈述。使用ANT,新闻学者通过强调技术在新闻网络中的作用,扩展了他们对新闻生产的理解。虽然记者通过日常使用(如搜索引擎、内容管理系统、手机、相机、电子邮件)使技术自然化,但这些工具仍然影响着新闻实践和产出。ANT从业者还考虑了参与新闻生产和流通的代理的多样性:专业记者、政治家、活动家以及各种商业和非商业组织。如果这种多样性在这个网络环境中变得更加活跃和联系起来,那么对于任何愿意将信息带给公众的人来说,传统媒体似乎仍然是一个强制性的通道点。最近的社会变化,如智能手机上新闻消费的普遍化和多应用程序平台新闻的兴起,表明ANT可能在集体努力中有用,以提供新闻是什么以及它将成为什么。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Actor-Network Theory and Journalism
Actor-network theory (ANT) is a sociological approach to the world that treats social phenomena as network effects. This approach focuses on the evolution of interactions within networks over time and is useful for studying situations of change, unsettled groups, and evolving practices such as current developments in the world of journalism. Journalism is a messy and complex social practice involving various actors, institutions, and technologies, some of which are in a state of crisis or are undergoing rapid change due to digitization. ANT has gained momentum in journalism studies among researchers analyzing journalists’ relationships with the diverse agents they in contact with on a daily basis (e.g., technologies, institutions, audiences, other news producers) and the relationships between news production, circulation, and usage. ANT practitioners use a set of simple concepts referred to as an infra-language, which allows them to exchange ideas and compare interpretations while letting the actors they are studying develop their own range of concepts (i.e., to speak in their own words). These concepts include actants, actor networks, obligatory passage points, and translation. ANT also proposes a set of principles for researchers to follow. These include considering all entities as participants in a phenomenon (e.g., people can make other people do things, and objects, such as computers or institutions, can as well) and following actors as they trace associations with others. Therefore, journalism scholars who use this approach conduct qualitative studies focusing on the place of a particular technology within a network or situation by following who and what is involved and how entities connect. They collect data such as the content produced, direct observations of news production, or statements from interviews during or after the case is over. Using ANT, journalism scholars have extended their comprehension of news production by highlighting technology’s role in journalistic networks. Although journalists naturalize technologies through daily use (e.g., search engines, content management systems, cell phones, cameras, email), these tools still influence journalistic practices and outputs. ANT practitioners also consider the diversity of agents participating in news production and circulation: professional journalists, politicians, activists, and diverse commercial and noncommercial organizations. If this diversity is becoming more active and connected in this networked environment, it seems that legacy media is still an obligatory passage point for anyone willing to bring information to the general public. Recent societal changes, such as the generalization of news consumption on smartphones and the rise of platform journalism on multiple apps, indicate that ANT may be useful in the collective endeavor to provide a clear picture of what journalism is and what it will become.
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