The Journalist as a Detective: The Media Insights and Critique in Post-1991 American, Russian and Swedish Crime Novels
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/18045Date
2019-09-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Today it often happens that the protagonist in crime fiction is a journalist—for instance, in the globally spread sub-genre of Nordic noir. This article examines what readers can learn about journalism by comparing crime fiction (a widely popular genre fostering society critique) from Russia, Sweden, and USA. These countries with significantly different press traditions have in the post-1991 era been involved in transformations of the media landscapes which have led to a public distrust in traditional media. We approach these novels as a form of adult media education and thereby as a resource for the reader to develop a critical thinking about journalism. The novels under consideration are permeated with transnational understandings and provide a rich ground for reflections around challenges for finding the truth, such as news-making as a male-dominated activity, journalism as a publicity arena, and an accelerating news environment (i.e., information overload paired with a competition for immediate reporting) as a threat to investigative journalism. The struggling, truth-seeking protagonists can be understood as an answer to a widespread cultural anxiety about journalism’s questioned authority as a truth-telling occupation.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Åker, Rogatchevski A. The Journalist as a Detective: The Media Insights and Critique in Post-1991 American, Russian and Swedish Crime Novels. Journalism Studies. 2019Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2019 The Author(s)