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Subject = Journalism;
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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 139 on page 1 of 6
Marked
Mark
‘A weekly newspaper unequalled in the annals of Irish journalism’: the Sunday Independent, 1905–84
(2018)
O'Brien, Mark
‘A weekly newspaper unequalled in the annals of Irish journalism’: the Sunday Independent, 1905–84
(2018)
O'Brien, Mark
http://doras.dcu.ie/24059/
Marked
Mark
‘An extraordinary clever journalist’: Arthur Griffith’s editorships, 1899-1919
(2014)
Kenny, Colum
‘An extraordinary clever journalist’: Arthur Griffith’s editorships, 1899-1919
(2014)
Kenny, Colum
http://doras.dcu.ie/24175/
Marked
Mark
‘Facile ignorance’ and ‘wild wild women’: religion, journalism and social change in Ireland 1961–1979
(2015)
O'Brien, Mark
‘Facile ignorance’ and ‘wild wild women’: religion, journalism and social change in Ireland 1961–1979
(2015)
O'Brien, Mark
http://doras.dcu.ie/24057/
Marked
Mark
‘Government Sources Said Last Night . . . The Development of the Parliamentary Press Lobby in Modern Ireland”,
(2001)
Horgan, John
‘Government Sources Said Last Night . . . The Development of the Parliamentary Press Lobby in Modern Ireland”,
(2001)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21775/
Marked
Mark
‘In war-torn Spain’ – the politics of Irish press coverage of the Spanish civil war
(2017)
O'Brien, Mark
‘In war-torn Spain’ – the politics of Irish press coverage of the Spanish civil war
(2017)
O'Brien, Mark
Abstract:
The Spanish civil war was a conflict that acted as a touchstone for the divisions within Irish society. As a newly-independent state that was 93% Catholic, reporting a conflict that involved, on the one hand, an armed rebellion against a democratically elected government, and on the other, the killing of clergy and the burning of churches, proved divisive.1 The decisions by Ireland’s three national newspaper titles to send correspondents to Spain only further polarised opinion as their reportage reinforced divergent opinions on the origins and meaning of the conflict. The examination, through digital archives, of the activities of these correspondents sheds new light on the experiences of war correspondents in this conflict and on the ‘newspaper war’ that sought to influence public and political opinion on it. Similarly, the reactions to these reports give an insight into how divisive the conflict was within a state seeking to bed down its own democratic institutions.
http://doras.dcu.ie/24046/
Marked
Mark
‘The best interests of the nation’: Frank Geary, the Irish Independent and the Spanish civil war
(2012)
O'Brien, Mark
‘The best interests of the nation’: Frank Geary, the Irish Independent and the Spanish civil war
(2012)
O'Brien, Mark
http://doras.dcu.ie/24052/
Marked
Mark
‘With the Irish in France’: the national press and recruitment in Ireland 1914-1916
(2016)
O'Brien, Mark
‘With the Irish in France’: the national press and recruitment in Ireland 1914-1916
(2016)
O'Brien, Mark
Abstract:
In January 1916 a party of journalists from seven Irish newspapers visited Irish regiments serving on the western front. Such a privilege came at a price. Organised by the department of recruiting for Ireland, it was made clear to the journalists that this embedded tour had an agenda: they were ‘to set down what they saw there for the benefit of recruiting in Ireland’. This article examines the extent to which the three national titles included on the tour accepted this role of communicating and legitimising recruitment policy. It sheds light on the involvement of two national newspaper editors in shaping recruitment policy in Ireland, illustrates how each of the three national titles reported the tour, and examines the effects such reportage had on recruiting in Ireland.
http://doras.dcu.ie/24044/
Marked
Mark
“A fine old time”: feminist print journalism in the 1970s
(2017)
O'Brien, Anne
“A fine old time”: feminist print journalism in the 1970s
(2017)
O'Brien, Anne
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/11849/
Marked
Mark
A case study of the televised international newsflow of Raidió Teilifís Éireann and The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: A comparative content analysis
(2012)
Testar, Jason Thomas
A case study of the televised international newsflow of Raidió Teilifís Éireann and The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: A comparative content analysis
(2012)
Testar, Jason Thomas
Abstract:
The objective of this comparative newsflow study was to analyse the televised international news broadcast in the national public service of Canada and the Republic of Ireland over a thirty-day term. In doing so, a quantitative content analysis comparing the output of two national public service providers (PSB), Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) is offered. In identifying the national origin of the international news, those reports utilizing the foreign correspondents of the PSBs were quantified. Finally, the ratio of international to domestic reportage and the volume of international news reports by quantity and duration are also compared. This study reviews the literature of cultural, corporate and state sovereignty as it looks to the regulatory structures of the broadcasters. Gatekeeping dynamics and the critical media ecology of a re-feudalizing public sphere are addressed as are the roles of framing and domestication. An exploration ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/17449/
Marked
Mark
A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris
(2011)
Binckes, Faith; Laing, Kathryn
A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris
(2011)
Binckes, Faith; Laing, Kathryn
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1964
Marked
Mark
A limited focus? Journalism, politics, and the celtic tiger
(2014)
Fahy, Declan
A limited focus? Journalism, politics, and the celtic tiger
(2014)
Fahy, Declan
http://doras.dcu.ie/24180/
Marked
Mark
A political economy of radical media
(2020)
Farrell, Seamus
A political economy of radical media
(2020)
Farrell, Seamus
Abstract:
This thesis offers a Marxist humanist political economic analysis of radical media. Radical media has been under-researched and underappreciated as a subject. Modern theorists have positioned it either as a fringe subject or as a diffuse topic without definitional clarity used interchangeably with concepts such as alternative and independent to describe non-mainstream media, communications and digital society. This thesis aims to clarify the conceptualisation of radical media and consider the concrete publications and platforms, shaped by radical media actors, that have developed in the digital age. This analysis is grounded by an understanding of the historic development of theories of and practices of radical media. A multi-methods research design is used as a basis for three analyses of three radical media samples: a typology analysis of concepts of radical media in the digital age (1995–2019), a content analysis of radical media publications and platforms in the UK, USA and Irel...
http://doras.dcu.ie/24995/
Marked
Mark
A pragmatic partnership: politicians and local media
(2014)
Kavanagh, Sarah
A pragmatic partnership: politicians and local media
(2014)
Kavanagh, Sarah
http://doras.dcu.ie/24183/
Marked
Mark
A private affair? Lobbying and transparency in modern Ireland
(2014)
Murphy, Gary
A private affair? Lobbying and transparency in modern Ireland
(2014)
Murphy, Gary
http://doras.dcu.ie/24186/
Marked
Mark
A Protestant Paper for a Protestant People: The Irish Times and the Southern Irish Minority
(2016)
d’Alton, Ian
A Protestant Paper for a Protestant People: The Irish Times and the Southern Irish Minority
(2016)
d’Alton, Ian
Abstract:
We Irish Protestants have always had a reputation for appreciating the minutiae of social distinction. Often invisible to the outsider, this extended to such as our dogs, our yachts and, of course, our newspapers. My paternal grandmother was no exception. Her take on the relative pecking order of the Irish dailies was that one got one’s news and views from the Irish Times, one lit the fire with the Irish Independent, and as for the Irish Press – ah! Delicacy forbids me to go into details, but suffice it to say that it involved cutting it into appropriate squares, and hanging these in the smallest room of the house!
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/5
Marked
Mark
Absolutism and the Confidentiality Debate: Confidentiality and Journalists Sources,
(2004)
Foley, Michael
Absolutism and the Confidentiality Debate: Confidentiality and Journalists Sources,
(2004)
Foley, Michael
Abstract:
Sources confidentiality is the one absolute in journalism. A guarantee never to divulge the name of a confidential sources is part of all codes of conduct and is the one clause that never contains a qualification, such as 'save where the public interest demands otherwise'. However, there are problems with this rule, especially when it is used by public relations practitioners or is used when it is clearly not in the public interest.
https://arrow.dit.ie/aaschmedart/38
Marked
Mark
Aggiornamento
(2006)
Horgan, John
Aggiornamento
(2006)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
When I first attempted to join the staff of the Irish Times, I hadn’t even heard of Douglas Gageby. I had an introduction to Seamus Kelly and worked that line for a time until, after dozens of phone calls to the ‘Irishman’s Diary’ office which—to my innocent surprise and eventual disillusionment—were never answered and never returned, I knocked on the door of Conor O’Brien at the Evening Press and got a job.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21609/
Marked
Mark
All the news of interest: The Kerryman, 1904-1948
(2018)
O'Brien, Mark
All the news of interest: The Kerryman, 1904-1948
(2018)
O'Brien, Mark
http://doras.dcu.ie/24058/
Marked
Mark
Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2000)
Horgan, John
Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2000)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
Ireland in the immediate post-war period offers, to the student of Cold War politics and intrigues, some unusual insights into the nature of political surveillance in general and to the surveillance of the press in particular, according to documents recently released by the US State department and made available in the US National Archives in Washington. Politically, the situation was becoming more volatile. Fianna Fail, which had been in power continuously since 1932 and had won its most recent election in 1944, was coming under increasingly vocal criticism from two key groups of erstwhile supporters: urban workers, who had been chafing under wages stand-still orders for much of the war and who were disappointed that the end of the conflict had not produced much in the way of material benefits; and republicans, many of whom had been interned during the war, and some of whom felt in any case that a sense of drive and purpose was missing from Fianna Fail's approach to the natio...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21598/
Marked
Mark
Biographical note by John Horgan on his grandfather, J.J. Horgan, author of Parnell to Pearse
(2009)
Horgan, John
Biographical note by John Horgan on his grandfather, J.J. Horgan, author of Parnell to Pearse
(2009)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21602/
Marked
Mark
Blessed with the Faculty of Mirthfulness: The New Journalism and Irish Local Newspapers in 1900
(2016)
Wehrly, Mark
Blessed with the Faculty of Mirthfulness: The New Journalism and Irish Local Newspapers in 1900
(2016)
Wehrly, Mark
Abstract:
Throughout the nineteenth century, several developments contrived – mostly indirectly – to make newspaper publishing in Britain an attractive business prospect. These included rising literacy levels, the abolition of taxes on newspapers in 1855 and innovations in the way newspapers were produced and distributed. From the mid-nineteenth century onwards this had the effect, in both Britain and Ireland, of increasing in multiples the number of different newspapers that were published (Cullen, 1989: 4–5). Likewise, in Dublin as in London, lively debates took place on the desirability of these developments, and the question of the social function of journalism was widely discussed (Anon, 1858; Anon, 1863; Elrington, 1867; Autolycus, 1879). One of the most discernible changes in British journalism in the last quarter of the nineteenth century – and one also that intensified this debate – was a movement to a ‘new journalism’.
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/8
Marked
Mark
Book Review: "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vicky Conway
(2011)
Daly, Yvonne Marie
Book Review: "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vicky Conway
(2011)
Daly, Yvonne Marie
Abstract:
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vicky Conway Irish Academic Press 2010, (pb) pp 217, ISBN 978-0716530312
http://doras.dcu.ie/16054/
Marked
Mark
Book Reviews: Volume 10
(2016)
Book Reviews: Volume 10
(2016)
Abstract:
Tony Harcup The Ethical Journalist, reviewed by Michael Foley
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol10/iss1/7
Marked
Mark
Book Reviews: Volume 12
(2016)
Book Reviews: Volume 12
(2016)
Abstract:
B. O’Neill, M. Ala-Fossi, P. Jauert, S. Lax, L. Nyre and H. Shaw (eds), Digital Radio in Europe: Technologies, Industries and Cultures, reviewed by Pat Hannon Rosemary Day, Community Radio in Ireland: Participation and Multiflows, reviewed by Pat Hannon Paschal Preston, Making the News: journalism and news cultures in contemporary Europe, reviewed by Nora French Christopher Morash, A History of the Media in Ireland, reviewed by John Horgan
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/9
Marked
Mark
Book Reviews: Volume 7
(2016)
Book Reviews: Volume 7
(2016)
Abstract:
Quality Assessment of Television, reviewed by Adrian Moynes Communication Concepts 6: Agenda-Setting, reviewed by David Quin News on a knife-edge: Gemini journalism and a global agenda, reviewed by David Quin
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol7/iss1/7
Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 139 on page 1 of 6
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Institution
Dublin City University (92)
Dublin Institute of Technology (39)
Mary Immaculate College (1)
Maynooth University (1)
NUI Galway (1)
Trinity College Dublin (1)
University College Cork (2)
University College Dublin (1)
University of Limerick (1)
Item Type
Conference item (1)
Doctoral thesis (1)
Journal article (17)
Other (120)
Peer Review Status
Peer-reviewed (5)
Non-peer-reviewed (1)
Unknown (133)
Year
2020 (4)
2019 (2)
2018 (11)
2017 (6)
2016 (21)
2015 (9)
2014 (21)
2012 (10)
2011 (9)
2010 (5)
2009 (3)
2008 (2)
2007 (10)
2006 (6)
2005 (4)
2004 (5)
2003 (2)
2002 (1)
2001 (1)
2000 (2)
1996 (2)
1994 (1)
1990 (2)
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