Twenty-first-century journalism juxtaposes words with still photographs, graphics, cartoons, video, sound, and animation in seamless presentations intended to be understood as real. As images work with words and music in short-and long-form journalistic presentations alongside advertising and entertainment media, fact and fantasy merge, dancing together in human memory as if all are real. These increasingly sophisticated messages, conveyed by media of every function and form, deserve careful attention ... [Book Review]

In Christopher Meyers (ed.), Journalism ethics: a philosophical approach. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 331 (2010)
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