Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism
Each emerging form of communication demands a new or at least adapted form of literacy. What remains constant is the user’s ability to critically analyse messages in whichever form they take. Multimodal longform journalism requires compound literacies to access, read, process, and make meaning. This...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1704552023-09-13T00:11:26Z Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism Duffy, Andrew Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Journalism Literacy Journalism Each emerging form of communication demands a new or at least adapted form of literacy. What remains constant is the user’s ability to critically analyse messages in whichever form they take. Multimodal longform journalism requires compound literacies to access, read, process, and make meaning. This article examines how meaning is made when readers navigate a complex, multimodal longform story which requires them to toggle between text, image, video, graphic and hyperlink. It describes the novel approach of autoethnographic textual analysis and delivers a ‘report on experience’ of immersion in five complex multimodal longform stories, followed by discussion of the literacies required to create and consume multimodal longform, and the implications for scholarship. 2023-09-13T00:11:25Z 2023-09-13T00:11:25Z 2022 Journal Article Duffy, A. (2022). Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism. Digital Journalism, 1-19. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2022.2069585 2167-0811 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170455 10.1080/21670811.2022.2069585 2-s2.0-85132677782 1 19 en Digital Journalism © 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. All rights reserved. |
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Each emerging form of communication demands a new or at least adapted form of literacy. What remains constant is the user’s ability to critically analyse messages in whichever form they take. Multimodal longform journalism requires compound literacies to access, read, process, and make meaning. This article examines how meaning is made when readers navigate a complex, multimodal longform story which requires them to toggle between text, image, video, graphic and hyperlink. It describes the novel approach of autoethnographic textual analysis and delivers a ‘report on experience’ of immersion in five complex multimodal longform stories, followed by discussion of the literacies required to create and consume multimodal longform, and the implications for scholarship. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Duffy, Andrew |
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Article |
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Duffy, Andrew |
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Duffy, Andrew |
title |
Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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Joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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joining the dots: the literacies of multimodal longform journalism |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170455 |
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