Ethnographic reporting: immersion as journalistic practice and pedagogy

Forfattere

  • Steffen Moestrup Danish School of Media and Journalism

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/journalistica.v19i1.159742

Nøgleord:

ethnographic journalism, immersion, participant observation, journalism methods, reflexivity

Resumé

Journalistica: The Methods Section

In this section, Journalistica puts a spotlight on research methods used in journalism studies and/or journalism practice.

Referencer

Conover, Ted (2016). Immersion: A Writer’s Guide to Going Deep. University of Chicago Press.

Cramer, Janet M., and Michael McDevitt (2004). “Ethnographic Journalism.” In Qualitative Research in Journalism: Taking It to the Streets, edited by Sharon H. Iorio, 127–143. New York: Routledge.

Hermann, Anne Kirstine (2016). “Ethnographic Journalism.” Journalism Studies, 17(1).

Hermann, Anne Kirstine (2024) “Ethnographic journalism: I enter an unfamiliar culture” In What am I doing here? A guide to first-person journalism, edited by Steffen Moestrup, Jesper Gaarskjær and Gitte Luk, 139-155. Copenhagen: Samfundslitteratur.

Jenkins, Mandy (2019). “What Ethnography Can Teach Us About Better Reporting.” Medium. https://medium.com/jsk-class-of-2019/what-ethnography-can-teach-us-about-better-reporting-92d858d2e6cb

Geertz, Clifford (1973). Thick description: Toward an interpretive theory of culture. In The interpretation of cultures (pp. 3-30). New York: Basic Books.

Downloads

Publiceret

2025-09-18

Citation/Eksport

Moestrup, S. (2025). Ethnographic reporting: immersion as journalistic practice and pedagogy. Journalistica, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.7146/journalistica.v19i1.159742

Nummer

Sektion

Methods Section