Slow journalism
Slow journalism is a news subculture borne out of the frustration at the quality of journalism from the mainstream press. A continuation from the larger "slow" movement, slow journalism shares the same values as other "slow"-movement subsets in its efforts to produce a good, clean and fair product.[1] Specialist titles have emerged around the world and proclaim to be antidotes to a mainstream media that is "filled to the brim with reprinted press releases, kneejerk punditry, advertorial nonsense and 'churnalism'".[2] Instead, slow journalism tends to focus on long reports and in-depth investigations.[3]
In 2011, Professor Peter Laufer wrote Slow News: A Manifesto for the Critical News Consumer, published by Oregon State University Press.
In August 2018, Jennifer Rauch, educator and researcher focusing on alternative media, media activism and popular culture, wrote the book Slow Media: Why Slow is Satisfying, Sustainable & Smart, published by Oxford University Press.
In March 2019, Daniele Nalbone (an Italian journalist) and Alberto Puliafito (an Italian journalist, writer and director, Editor in Chief of the Italian digital newspaper Slow News), wrote the book Slow Journalism - Chi ha ucciso il giornalismo?, published by Fandango Libri.
Slow journalism titles
- 24h01, Belgium
- De Correspondent, the Netherlands
- Delayed Gratification, UK
- ProPublica, USA
- Slow News, Italy
- Zetland, Denmark
See also
References
- Masurier, Megan Le (4 March 2015). "What is Slow Journalism?". Journalism Practice. 9 (2): 138–152. doi:10.1080/17512786.2014.916471. ISSN 1751-2786.
- "Delayed Gratification - Why Slow Journalism Matters". www.slow-journalism.com. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- Jean-François Sacré (14 June 2017). ""Wilfried", le nouveau magazine belge de "slow journalism"". L'Echo (in French). Retrieved 29 April 2020.