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个人简介

Dr. Jesse Owen Hearns-Branaman is Head of the Department of Communication and Associate Professor of International Journalism. He holds a PhD from the University of Leeds, an MA in International Communication Studies from the University of Nottingham, and a BA in Radio and Television from San Francisco State University. He has taught communication, media, and journalism studies at the University of Sheffield, University of Leeds, and Leeds Beckett University in the UK, Zhejiang Wanli University and the University of Nottingham in China, and the National Institute of Development Administration in Thailand. His research interests include post-structuralism, ideology, critical linguistics, political economy of news, comparative journalism, tourism, and epistemological theory. He has published three books, Journalism and Foreign Policy How the US and UK Media Cover Official Enemies (Routledge 2022, co-edited with T. Bergman), Journalism and the Philosophy of Truth: Beyond Objectivity and Balance (Routledge: 2016), and The Political Economy of News in China: Manufacturing Harmony (Lexington: 2015), and journal articles in Journalism Studies, Journalism, Media Asia, Media Practice and Education, and International Journal of Baudrillard Studies, as well as a number of chapters for edited collections. Qualifications PhD Communications, University of Leeds MA International Communications Studies, University of Nottingham BA Radio & Television Studies, San Francisco State University

研究领域

Analysis of influences on news production and journalism pedagogy. Examination of discourses used by journalists in talking about truth and power. Theorizing epistemology and ideology of journalism and tourism. Critical linguistics and news content analysis.

近期论文

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Monographs Authenticity and Tourism: Preservation, Miniaturization, and Replication, with L. Chen (forthcoming 2023, Routledge). Journalism and the Philosophy of Truth: Beyond Truth and Balance, (2016, Routledge). The Political Economy of News in China: Manufacturing Harmony, (2014, Lexington). Edited Volumes Politics, Media, and the War in Ukraine, (forthcoming, 2023 Routledge), co-edited with T. Bergman. Journalism and Foreign Policy: How the US and UK Media Cover Official Enemies, (2022, Routledge), co-edited with T. Bergman. Peer-Reviewed Articles ‘Professionalism and fetishistic disavowal in Thai and Chinese journalism,’ Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism (2021, available here) [SSCI] ‘The effects of coups d’état on journalists: The case of the 2014 Thai coup as both exemplary and exceptional,’ Media Asia, (2020, available here) [ESCI] ‘Using GMG’s News Game as a pedagogical tool: Exploring journalism students’ framing practices,’ Media Practice and Education 21(1), (2020, available here) [ESCI] ‘Official enemies in commercial and soft power media: Agency and the Iran crisis,’ Journalism Studies 18(4), (2017, available here) [SSCI] ‘Towards a Hyperrealist epistemology of the news media: Baudrillard, Boorstin, Tuchman, and Hall,’ International Journal of Baudrillard Studies 12(2), (2015, available here) ‘Journalistic professionalism as self-censorship and fetishistic disavowal,’ Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism 15(1), (2014, available here) [SSCI] ‘The Egyptian Revolution Did Not Take Place: On the live TV coverage by Al Jazeera English,’ The International Journal of Baudrillard Studies 9(1), (2012, available here) ‘A political economy of news media in the People’s Republic of China,’ The Westminster Papers on Culture and Communication 6(2), (2009, available here) [ESCI] ‘“Must we ourselves not become gods?”: A perspective on the theories of Foucault, Debord and Baudrillard in explaining contemporary power structures,’ International Journal of Baudrillard Studies 5(2), (2008, available here) Chapters in Edited Volumes ‘Discourses in the US and UK press on Iran,’ in J. O. Hearns-Branaman and T. Bergman (eds), Journalism and Foreign Policy: How the US and UK Media Cover Official Enemies, (2022, Routledge) ‘Teaching gatekeeping theory though role-playing activities,’ in X. Kuang and D. Garrisi (eds), Journalism Pedagogy in Transitional Countries, (2022, Palgrave Macmillan). ‘The role of American journalism during a pandemic: Uncertainty and lessons not learned,’ in S. Zhao et al, COVID-19 Pandemic, Crisis Response and the Changing World: Perspectives in Humanities and Social Sciences, (2021, Springer, available here) ‘Farther apart, closer together: How the use of new technologies during covid-19 may forever alter the face of journalism,’ in S. Zhao et al, COVID-19 Pandemic, Crisis Response and the Changing World: Perspectives in Humanities and Social Sciences, (2021, Springer, available here), co-authored with J. Bliss ‘What the Propaganda Model can learn from sociology of journalism,’ in D. Broudy, J. Klaehn, and J. Pedro (eds), The Propaganda Model: Filtering Perception and Awareness, (2018, University of Westminster Press, available here)

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