Reporting War in 140 Characters: How Journalists Used Twitter During the 2014 Gaza–Israel Conflict

Authors

  • Ori Tenenboim School of Journalism, The University of Texas at Austin

Keywords:

conflict, gatekeeping, Gaza, indexing, Israel, sources, Twitter, war

Abstract

Because Twitter may facilitate interconnectedness among diverse actors—elite and nonelite, inside and outside of a given national community—it can potentially challenge traditional war journalism that has typically been elite-oriented and nationally oriented. The present study examined this potential during the 2014 Gaza–Israel conflict. Based on a content analysis of Twitter messages by Israeli and international journalists, the study suggests that in wartime journalists on Twitter may have agency that can manifest in retweeting critical messages—not necessarily in the language of their national community—and conversing with people outside official power circles. However, institutional, cultural, and national forces still seem dominant, as particularly reflected in messages by journalists who are members of one of the conflicting parties. “Mr. Gates” on Twitter may have more agency than he had decades ago, but seems constrained by virtual national boundaries. By showing the extent of journalists’ agency and constraints, the study advances our understanding of war journalism in the digital age.

Author Biography

Ori Tenenboim, School of Journalism, The University of Texas at Austin

Ori Tenenboim is a doctoral student in the School of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. He previously worked in the Israeli news industry, serving as the head of a the news desk and a news editor at Walla!, a popular website. Tenenboim's areas of study are digital journalism and political communication. His work has been published in Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, Digital Journalism, and Journalism Practice.

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Published

2017-09-14

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Section

Articles