Description

Book Synopsis

This book examines how Generation Z, defined by their orientation as “social media natives,” grew up in a media system centered around social media. D. Jasun Carr and Mitchell T. Bard explore how Gen Z consumes news media differently than other cohorts, and how this shift in consumption affects both the members of Gen Z, the media, and media scholarship. The authors take a media ecology approach to laying out the new media landscape in which Gen Z was raised, before looking at how this new ecology affects many of the traditional theories and underpinnings of media effects, media psychology, and journalism. Through the use of original experimental research and the compilation of extant theory and survey data, Carr and Bard argue that while members of Gen Z eschew the more traditional structures of the media ecosystem in favor of those that incorporate a social element, they nevertheless behave, in many ways, similarly to those who came before. Scholars of communication, media studies, social media, and journalism will find this book of particular interest.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1: The Foundations of a Discipline

Chapter 2: Generation Z: The “Never-Corded”

Chapter 3: How Generation Z Values, Consumes and Evaluates Journalism

Chapter 4: How Generation Z Members Choose Their News

Chapter 5: Fake News, Clickbait, and Trust

Chapter 6: Entertainment v News: The Fight for Political Knowledge and Participation

Chapter 7: The Kids Are Alright

References

About the Authors

Journalism in the Generation Z Age

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A Hardback by D. Jasun Carr, Mitchell T. Bard

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    View other formats and editions of Journalism in the Generation Z Age by D. Jasun Carr

    Publisher: Lexington Books
    Publication Date: 18/12/2023
    ISBN13: 9781793639943, 978-1793639943
    ISBN10: 1793639949

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book examines how Generation Z, defined by their orientation as “social media natives,” grew up in a media system centered around social media. D. Jasun Carr and Mitchell T. Bard explore how Gen Z consumes news media differently than other cohorts, and how this shift in consumption affects both the members of Gen Z, the media, and media scholarship. The authors take a media ecology approach to laying out the new media landscape in which Gen Z was raised, before looking at how this new ecology affects many of the traditional theories and underpinnings of media effects, media psychology, and journalism. Through the use of original experimental research and the compilation of extant theory and survey data, Carr and Bard argue that while members of Gen Z eschew the more traditional structures of the media ecosystem in favor of those that incorporate a social element, they nevertheless behave, in many ways, similarly to those who came before. Scholars of communication, media studies, social media, and journalism will find this book of particular interest.



    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Chapter 1: The Foundations of a Discipline

    Chapter 2: Generation Z: The “Never-Corded”

    Chapter 3: How Generation Z Values, Consumes and Evaluates Journalism

    Chapter 4: How Generation Z Members Choose Their News

    Chapter 5: Fake News, Clickbait, and Trust

    Chapter 6: Entertainment v News: The Fight for Political Knowledge and Participation

    Chapter 7: The Kids Are Alright

    References

    About the Authors

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