Goodbye Gutenberg: a Harvard special on newspaper and journalism in the digital age
The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University has published Goodbye Gutenberg, an issue of Nieman Reports devoted to newspapers and journalism in the digital age.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sensing the Change
- Caught in the Web
By Jon Palfreman
A Dinosaur Adapts
By Kevin Cullen
Risk-Adverse Newspapers Won’t Cross the Digital Divide
By Chris Cobler
Capital Crisis in the Profitable Newspaper Industry
By Robert G. Picard
Newspapers and Their Quest for the Holy Grail
By Michael Riley
Pushing Forward
- Tired of Waiting to Move Ahead
By Geneva Overholser
Media Convergence: ‘Just Do It’
By Ulrik Haagerup
Navigating the Road to Convergence
By Ralph Gage
Meshing Purpose With Product
By Philip Meyer
Building Community
- Community Building on the Web: Implications for Journalism
By Craig Newmark
The Challenge of Community Building
By Gary Kebbel
Why Anonymity Exists and Works on Newspapers’ Web Sites
By Steve Yelvington
Finding Our Footing
- Are Journalists the 21st Century’s Buggy Whip Makers?
By William Dietrich
Vanishing Jobs at Newspapers
By William Dietrich
Looking Past the Rush Into Convergence
By Edward Wasserman
We Can Adjust to Changing Demands, But Should We?
By Joe Zelnik
Evolving Definitions of News
By Tom Bettag
Toward a New Journalism With Verification
Speech by Bill Kovach
Journalism and Web 2.0
BY Francis Pisani
Expanding Our Reach
- Gathering Voices to Share With a Worldwide Online Audience
By Rebecca MacKinnon and Ethan Zuckerman
The Global Voices Manifesto
By Rebecca MacKinnon and Ethan Zuckerman
Blogging News in China
By By Luwei (Rose) Luqiu
Puzzling Contradictions of China’s Internet Journalism
By Fons Tuinstra
Will News Find a Home on YouTube?
By Morris Jones
Converging on the Web
- Myths and Realities of Convergence
By Randy Covington
When Walls Come Tumbling Down
By Jim Kennedy
Enterprising Journalism in a Multimedia World
By John Solomon
Confronting the Dual Challenge of Print and Electronic News
By Paul E. Steiger
Feeding the Web While Reporting the Story
By Neil Chase
Exploring New Connections
- Taking the Big Gulp
By Jane Ellen Stevens
Must-Read Books
By Jane Ellen Stevens
Sights and Sounds of a Newspaper’s Editorials
By Susan Albright
An Optimistic Plunge Into Multimedia Reporting
By Joe Howry
Narrative Journalism in the Era of the Web
By Lee Hancock and Mark Miller
Finding New People to Tell the Stories
By Craig Cox
When the Web Feeds the Newspaper
By Eric Blom
Inviting Readers Into the Editorial Process
By Ellen Foley
The Quickening Pace of Change
By Ellen Foley
The Digital Reach of a Newspaper’s Code of Ethics
By Dean Miller
Taking Words
- Plagiarism Goes by a Different Name on the Web
By Judy Muller
Teaching Journalism Students to Value What Is Authentic
By Brent Walth
The ‘P’ Word in the Book Business
By Margaret Engel