Blogging Back then: Annotative journalism in I.F. Stone's Weekly and Talking Points Memo
Articles
Overview
published in
- Journalism Journal
publication date
- January 2015
start page
- 99
end page
- 118
issue
- 1
volume
- 16
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
full text
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 1464-8849
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1741-3001
abstract
- This article develops the concept of "annotative journalism" through a close review of two muckraking investigations, 50 years apart, by the newsletter I.F. Stone's Weekly and the website Talking Points Memo. These cases stand out in hindsight as investigative coups, though neither relied on the tools we associate with that kind of journalism: anonymous sources, secret documents, and so on. Instead, both investigations proceeded mainly through the analysis of published texts, in particular news reports, in light of a wider media and political critique. Annotative journalism unsettles core practices and assumptions of objective reporting. It rejects narrative coherence in favor of a set of critical textual practices, revealing reporting routines to the reader and building explicit arguments from and about the work of other journalists. And it troubles the professional distinction between reporting and opinion; these "scoops" came through, not in spite of, the politics of the journalists who worked on them.
Classification
subjects
- Information Science
keywords
- annotation; blogging; i.f. stone; intertextuality; muckraking; objectivity