Barbie Zelizer presents research on Cold War mindedness in journalism at the Headquarters of Católica
"When we think about journalism, we typically think of the present: headlines, scoops, news updates, and breaking news. But journalism is also about the past." It was with these words that Barbie Zelizer, a specialist in journalism studies, began the conference entitled "When the Past Drives the News, and Why We Should Care", at the headquarters of Universidade Católica Portuguesa, one day before being awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the university.
Director of the Center for Media at Risk at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, Barbie Zelizer is an award-winning journalism researcher specializing in crisis, culture, memory, and images. She is co-founder of the Lisbon Winter School for the Study of Communication, at the Faculty of Human Sciences (FCH). "Professor Zelizer has authored or edited 16 books, including several award winning books, and has published more than 150 articles, book chapters and essays," explained Nelson Ribeiro, Dean of the FCH.
"In her most recent book, The Journalism Manifesto, that she co-authored, she explains quite brilliantly how and why journalism needs to change if it wants to remain as a pillar of democracy", added the Dean.
Her next book, which she is now finishing, will be about the Cold War and how it drives journalism today. A topic she chose to present at the conference, sharing the research she has been developing.
"I really started thinking about the Cold War and what journalism looked like in the Cold War in my earliest days here at Católica. I remember coming to conferences about latency, and peripheral modernities and the Cold War was just everywhere in my thinking", Zelizer shared, adding she consolidated her thoughts on this topic. "thanks to this collaboration that has been ongoing with Católica and the Faculty of Human Sciences."
"The increasing relevance of the Cold War, right now, has intensified almost beyond comparison, and it is certainly more relevant now than it was to begin with", she explained, also highlighting the recent conflict between Russia and Ukraine. "It has become painfully clear that mindsets from the past go where they want, they go at their own vallition, they travel across geographies in unreliable, unpredictable, and often irrelevant ways. So Cold War mindedness, though it started as a pact within the United Stated, permeates newsmaking in many places", she clarified.
Zelizer looks at the past to understand current journalism. "I'm not just thinking of news archives, I'm thinking about routines for breaking news, sourcing conventions, storytelling formula, rules for using images. Decision making in journalism comes from the past, a fact that simplfies how journalists make news, and signals when certain positions and pratices work and don't", she argued.
Her conference centered on "only one way how the past drives the news, through ingraned mindsets that offer a mode of understanding the world and help journalists determine what's newsworthy and why". The scholar is referring to a "mindset that comes from the Cold War and continues to haunt US journalism as much today as it did then."
Barbie Zelizer's work has been recognized with several awards and distinctions, such as her election to the American and British Academies of Arts and Sciences. For her contribution to the area of Social Sciences, Universidade Católica Portuguesa will distinguish the researcher with the award of Doctor Honoris Causa on February 2nd.
Categories: Católica in Lisbon
Thu, 02/02/2023