Resurrecting the notion of journalistic objectivity : a discussion of journalistic objectivity in one-on-one interviews


Autoria(s): Bowman , Leo; Ubayasiri, Kasun Gayal
Data(s)

14/12/2010

Resumo

A number of recent books on ethics (Hirst and Patching 2005, Tanner et al, 2005, Ward, 2006)have indicated that traditional understandings of journalism "objectivity" are in need of renovation if they are to sustain the claim as a guide to ethical action. Ward argues for the recasting of the notions of traditional objectivity to offer a "pragmatic objectivity" as an alternative and plausible underpinning to ethical journalism practice. He argues that a recast or "pragmatic objectivity" should respond to the changing rhetorical relationship between journalists and their audiences; and, in so doing, should take inspiration from attempts to be objective in other domains---professions such as law and public relations in seeking models. This paper seeks to take a step in that direction through illustrating how journalism interviews do "objectivity" through an adaptation of the principles of the "Fourth Estate" to political interviews. It turns such analysis to the ends of establishing the particular "pragmatic ethic" underpinning such practices and how journalism interviewing techniques has allowed for proactive journalists to strike a workable balance between pursuing the public interest and observing the restraining protocols of modern journalistic practice.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40167/

Publicador

Central Queensland University, Faculty of Informatics and Communication

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40167/1/COVERSHEET_C40167.pdf

http://www.ejournalist.com.au/v10n2/BowmanUbayasiri.pdf

Bowman , Leo & Ubayasiri, Kasun Gayal (2010) Resurrecting the notion of journalistic objectivity : a discussion of journalistic objectivity in one-on-one interviews. Ejournalist, 10(2).

Direitos

Copyright 2010 See the authors.

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; Journalism, Media & Communication

Palavras-Chave #190301 Journalism Studies
Tipo

Journal Article