Mo “Meta” Blues: How Popular Culture Can Act as Metajournalistic Discourse

Authors

  • Patrick Ferrucci University of Colorado Boulder

Keywords:

metajournalistic discourse, popular culture, boundaries of journalism, journalism studies, news production

Abstract

Prior research into metajournalism argues that this type of discourse holds significant influence on how the journalism industry is socially constructed. Studies of how journalism is depicted in popular culture make the same claim. This study, through a textual analysis of television dramas The Wire and House of Cards, bridges these two bodies of literature and argues that journalism studies scholars should not limit their definition of metajournalistic discourse to journalists commenting on or criticizing the industry and to audience members commenting on or criticizing actual journalism. The results of the study are then interpreted through the lens of the theory of metajournalistic discourse.

Author Biography

Patrick Ferrucci, University of Colorado Boulder

Patrick Ferrucci (Ph.D. University of Missouri) is an assistant professor in the Department of Journalism in the College of Media, Communication and Information at University of Colorado-Boulder. His research examines different aspects of media sociology, primarily economic and technological influences on digital news production. His work primarily looks at how economics and technology affect message construction at both the organizational and individual level.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2018-11-28

Issue

Section

Articles