U.S. War Correspondents Tweeting Ukraine a Case Study in Transnational Meta-Journalistic Discourse

Lindsay Palmer*, Kiran Bhatia

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    This paper investigates how war correspondents working for U.S.-based news organizations Tweeted about the early stages of the 2022 war in Ukraine, focusing particularly on instances when these war reporters contributed to a distinctly transnational version of what Matt Carlson has termed “metajournalistic discourse” (2016). Defining this concept as the “public expressions evaluating news texts, the practices that produce them, or the conditions of their reception” (Carlson [2016]. “Metajournalistic Discourse and the Meanings of Journalism: Definitional Control, Boundary Work, and Legitimation.” Communication Theory 26 (4): 349–368, 353), we argue that from February to May of 2022, U.S. war correspondents constructed a discourse that situated their own labor within the boundaries of what counts as the most acceptable form of war journalism, representing their reportage as the most independent and transparent form of war reporting. Conversely, they situated the work of Russian and Ukrainian journalists outside this boundary. The paper ultimately argues that journalism scholars should think more transnationally about the discourses that discuss journalistic labor.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1293-1309
    Number of pages17
    JournalJournalism Studies
    Volume25
    Issue number11
    Early online date10 Jul 2024
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2024

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

    Keywords

    • discourse
    • Russia
    • social media
    • Twitter
    • Ukraine
    • war correspondence

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