Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment. / Menke, Manuel; Seeger, Christina.

In: Digital Journalism, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Menke, M & Seeger, C 2024, 'Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment', Digital Journalism. https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524

APA

Menke, M., & Seeger, C. (2024). Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment. Digital Journalism. https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524

Vancouver

Menke M, Seeger C. Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment. Digital Journalism. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524

Author

Menke, Manuel ; Seeger, Christina. / Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment? How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment. In: Digital Journalism. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{5854ad824faa41898535508f9413d714,
title = "Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment?: How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment",
abstract = "Many journalists regularly experience harassment in their daily work. Audiences in Western democracies have become increasingly aggressive in their communication due to the spread of anti-press sentiments and populist attitudes. This is further facilitated by technological changes, rendering interaction with journalists simple and intrusive. So far, research has found that journalists reporting on specific topics and embodying particular social identities regarding gender, race, sexuality, and religion are predominately and systematically under threat. While these individual factors are important to expose the political targeting of these journalists, we shifted our focus to the different journalist-audience relationships different media outlets establish. In an explorative interview study with 32 German journalists, we analyzed how experiences of harassment are related to the journalist-audience relationships developing in national and local as well as quality, tabloid, constructive, and young audience media. Our findings indicate that these contextual factors determine the composition of the audience, leading journalists to assess closeness or distance differently in the journalist-audience relationship. Subsequently, this results in dissimilar experiences of harassment.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Journalism, harassment, incivility, emotions, media and communication research, qualitative interviews, audiences",
author = "Manuel Menke and Christina Seeger",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524",
language = "English",
journal = "Digital Journalism",
issn = "2167-0811",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Different Media, Different Audiences, Different Harassment?

T2 - How the Journalist-Audience Relationship Shapes Experiences of Harassment

AU - Menke, Manuel

AU - Seeger, Christina

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Many journalists regularly experience harassment in their daily work. Audiences in Western democracies have become increasingly aggressive in their communication due to the spread of anti-press sentiments and populist attitudes. This is further facilitated by technological changes, rendering interaction with journalists simple and intrusive. So far, research has found that journalists reporting on specific topics and embodying particular social identities regarding gender, race, sexuality, and religion are predominately and systematically under threat. While these individual factors are important to expose the political targeting of these journalists, we shifted our focus to the different journalist-audience relationships different media outlets establish. In an explorative interview study with 32 German journalists, we analyzed how experiences of harassment are related to the journalist-audience relationships developing in national and local as well as quality, tabloid, constructive, and young audience media. Our findings indicate that these contextual factors determine the composition of the audience, leading journalists to assess closeness or distance differently in the journalist-audience relationship. Subsequently, this results in dissimilar experiences of harassment.

AB - Many journalists regularly experience harassment in their daily work. Audiences in Western democracies have become increasingly aggressive in their communication due to the spread of anti-press sentiments and populist attitudes. This is further facilitated by technological changes, rendering interaction with journalists simple and intrusive. So far, research has found that journalists reporting on specific topics and embodying particular social identities regarding gender, race, sexuality, and religion are predominately and systematically under threat. While these individual factors are important to expose the political targeting of these journalists, we shifted our focus to the different journalist-audience relationships different media outlets establish. In an explorative interview study with 32 German journalists, we analyzed how experiences of harassment are related to the journalist-audience relationships developing in national and local as well as quality, tabloid, constructive, and young audience media. Our findings indicate that these contextual factors determine the composition of the audience, leading journalists to assess closeness or distance differently in the journalist-audience relationship. Subsequently, this results in dissimilar experiences of harassment.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Journalism

KW - harassment

KW - incivility

KW - emotions

KW - media and communication research

KW - qualitative interviews

KW - audiences

U2 - 10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524

DO - 10.1080/21670811.2024.2351524

M3 - Journal article

JO - Digital Journalism

JF - Digital Journalism

SN - 2167-0811

ER -

ID: 391815534