Description: Media Ethics by Lee Wilkins, Chad Painter, Philip Patterson The tenth edition of this authoritative book focuses on the most pressing media ethics issues, including coverage of the 2020 pandemic and election. Enabling students to make ethical decisions in an increasingly complex environment, the book focuses on practical ethical theory... FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description The tenth edition of this authoritative book focuses on the most pressing media ethics issues, including coverage of the 2020 pandemic and election. Enabling students to make ethical decisions in an increasingly complex environment, the book focuses on practical ethical theory for use across the media curriculum. Author Biography Lee Wilkins is Distinguished Curators Teaching Professor and professor emeritus in the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri.Chad Painter is assistant professor of communication at the University of Dayton.Philip Patterson is distinguished professor of mass communication at Oklahoma Christian University. Table of Contents * New to this editionForeword Updated Preface 1. An Introduction to Ethical Decision-MakingEssay: Cases and moral systems, Deni ElliottCase 1-A: How to read a casestudy, Philip PattersonPart I: Foundations2. Information Ethics: A Profession Seeks theTruth*Case 2-A: Rules of engagement: Mary Louise Kelly and the Mike Pompeo interview, Lee Wilkins*Case 2-B: Dont Tweet ill of the dead, Chad Painter*Case 2-C: Dr. Doolittle not: Debunking fake animal stories, Lee WilkinsCase 2-D: Anonymous or confidential: Unnamed sources in the news, Lee WilkinsCase 2-E: Death as content: Social responsibility and the documentary filmmaker, Tanner HawkinsCase 2-F: When is objective reporting irresponsible reporting?, Theodore L. Glasser3. Privacy: Looking for Solitude in the Global Village*Case 3-A: Harry and Meghan: Context and Control, Lee Wilkins*Case 3-B: Guilty by Google: Unpublishing and crime reporting in the digital age, Deborah L. DwyerCase 5-C: Drones and thenews, Kathleen Bartzen CulverCase 5-D: Doxxer, doxxer, give me the news?, Mark Anthony PoepselCase 5-E: Looking for Richard Simmons, Lee WilkinsCase 5-F: Children and framing: The use of childrens images in an anti-same-sex marriagead, YangLiu4. Loyalty: Choosing Between Competing Allegiances*Case 4-A: Cuomo interviews Cuomo, Chad PainterCase 4-B: To watch or to report: What journalists were thinking in the midst of disaster, Lee WilkinsCase 4-C: Public/on-air journalist vs. private/online life: Can itwork?, Madison HagoodCase 4-D: When you are the story: Sexual harassment in the newsroom, Lee WilkinsCase 4-E: Where everybody knows your name: Reporting and relationships in a smallmarket, Ginny WhitehouseCase 4-F: Quit, blow the whistle, or go with theflow?, Robert D. Wakefield5. Mass Media in a Democratic Society: Keeping a Promise*Case 5-A: Murder the media: Ethics on January 6, 2021, Lee Wilkins*Case 5-B: A second draft of history: The New York Timess 1619 Project, Lee Wilkins*Case 5-C: When journalists question algorithms and automated systems, Xerxes Minocher and Kathleen Bartzen Culver*Case 5-D: Watchdog or horndog: Daily Mail, revenge porn, and Katie Hill, Chad Painter*Case 5-E: Mayor Jim Wests computer, Ginny WhitehouseCase 5-F: For God and Country: The media and national security, Jeremy Littau and Mark Slagle6. Informing a Just Society*Case 6-A: The Kansas City Star in black and white: A newspaper apologizes for 140 years of coverage, Lee Wilkins*Case 6-B: Journalism and activism: When identity becomes political, Rebecca Smith*Case 6-C: Wheres the line? Covering racial protest on a college campus, Nicole KraftCase 6-D: Spotlight: It takes a village to abuse a child, Lee WilkinsCase 6-E: Cincinnati Enquirers heroinbeat, Chad PainterCase 6-F: GoldieBlox: Building a future ontheft, Scott BurgessPart II: Applications7. Strategic Communication: Does Client Advocate Mean Consumer Adversary?*Case 7-A: Fyre Festival becomes Fyre Fraud, Emily Horvath and Chad Painter*Case 7-B: Through the glass darkly: Peloton, body shaming, and Americas odd relationship with exercise, Lee WilkinsCase 7-C: Weedvertising, Lee WilkinsCase 7-D: Keeping Up with the Kardashians prescription drug choices, Tara WalkerCase 7-E: Between a (Kid) Rock and a hardplace, MollyShorCase 7-F: Was that an Apple computer I saw? Product placement in the United States andabroad, Philip Patterson8. Picture This: Technology, visual information, and evolving standards*Case 8-A: New York Times ends political cartoons, Chad Painter*Case 8-B: Did you meme that: The unhoppy life of Pepe the Frog, Lee WilkinsCase 8-C: Remember my fame: Digital necromancy and the immortal celebrity, SamanthaMostCase 8-D: Problem photos and publicoutcry, Jon RoosenraadCase 8-E: Above the fold: Balancing newsworthy photos with community standards, Jim Godbold and Janelle HartmanCase 8-F: Horror inSoweto, Sue OBrien9. Media Economics: The Deadline Meets the BottomLine*Case 9-A: Twitters Trump problem, Chad Painter*Case 9-B: When investigative reporting is bad for business, Chad Painter*Case 9-C: And the Oscar rejects...Frida Mom, Chad PainterCase 9-D: Who controls the local news? Sinclair Broadcasting Group and "must-runs", KeenaNealCase 9-E: Contested interests, contested terrain: The New York Times Code ofEthics, Lee Wilkins and Bonnie BrennenCase 9-F: Automated journalism: The rise of robot reporters, Chad Painter10. The Ethical Dimensions of Art and Entertainment*Case 10-A: Documenting culture clash in American Factory,Emily Callam and Chad Painter*Case 10-B: The Daily Shows one-client legal team, Chad Painter*Case 10-C: #OscarsSoWhite: Representation in the creative process, Lee WilkinsCase 10-D: Get Out: When the horror israce, Michael Fuhlhage and Lee WilkinsCase 10-E: To die for: Making terrorists of gamers in Modern Warfare2, Philip PattersonCase 10-F: The Onion: Finding humor in mass shootings, Chad Painter11. Becoming a Moral AdultBibliographyIndex Review From the concept of flourishing through explorations of information accuracy, access, and trust, Media Ethics enables us to believe that the best within us can be tapped. Though right action often isnt easily determined, the opportunity to expand our capacity for empathy and understanding is here if were willing to do the work.The best way to engage students in a conversation about media ethics is to provide them with relevant cases that they can relate to. This book provides a great mix of contemporary cases from varied media.This book is one of the few that examines media ethics from the perspective of various media disciplines including photography, advertising and public relations in addition to news. This reality makes it easier to address the needs and interests of our students enrolled in these various concentrations. Long Description The tenth edition of this authoritative book focuses on the most pressing media ethics issues, including coverage of the 2020 pandemic and election. Media Ethics: Issues and Cases enables students to make ethical decisions in an increasingly complex environment. Focusing on practical ethical theory, the book is useful across the media curriculum. Review Quote This book is one of the few that examines media ethics from the perspective of various media disciplines including photography, advertising and public relations in addition to news. This reality makes it easier to address the needs and interests of our students enrolled in these various concentrations. Feature * Coverage of 2020 events such as COVID-19, the presidential election, and social movements (#BLM), as well as the January 6, 2021 storming of the US Capitol.* Each case has pedagogical questions that expand outward from the specifics of the case itself to ever-larger issues suggested by the caseChapters in such areas as social justice, media and democracy, loyalty, etc. cross all media and include all media as opposed to segmenting the text by medium.* An introductory chapter in moral philosophy begins the text and a concluding chapter in moral development concludes it * Text addresses the implications of digital content throughout multiple media industries and platforms.* Watch this video to learn about the authors and their approach to writing the textbook! Details ISBN1538142376 ISBN-10 1538142376 ISBN-13 9781538142370 Format Paperback Author Philip Patterson Language English Year 2021 Publisher Rowman & Littlefield Audience Age 18-22 Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Place of Publication Lanham, MD Country of Publication United States Pages 408 Illustrations Text Boxes; Illustrations, unspecified; Tables; Halftones, Black & White including Black & White Photographs; Black & White Illustrations NZ Release Date 2021-07-07 US Release Date 2021-07-07 Publication Date 2021-07-07 UK Release Date 2021-07-07 Subtitle Issues and Cases Edition Description Tenth Edition DEWEY 175 Audience Tertiary & Higher Education AU Release Date 2021-07-14 We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:136578635;
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ISBN-13: 9781538142370
Book Title: Media Ethics
Item Height: 231 mm
Item Width: 155 mm
Author: Philip Patterson, Chad Painter, Lee Wilkins
Publication Name: Media Ethics: Issues and Cases
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Subject: Journalism
Publication Year: 2021
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 540 g
Number of Pages: 408 Pages