 Name: Gausvami Surbhi
 Paper No: 15
 Sem:4
 Submitted to: Dr. Dilip Barad
 Department of English
 MKBU university
 Enrollment No: 2069108420170008
 Roll No: 22
 E-mail id: gausvamisurbhi17@gmail.com
 Batch year: 2016-18
 New Style of news writing and journalism
 Developed in the 1960s and 1970s
 It uses literary techniques
 Subjective perspective
 A literary style reminiscent of long-form non-
fiction
 Emphasizing "truth" over "facts,“
 In contrast to traditional journalism
 The term was codified by Tom
Wolfe in a 1973
 ’The New Journalism’
 Includes works by Tom
Wolfe, Truman
Capote, Hunter S.
Thompson, Norman
Mailer, Joan Didion, Terry
Southern, Robert
Christgau, Gay Talese and
others.
 Kind of magazine
 John Hohenberg, in The Professional Journalist (1960),
called the interpretive reporting which developed after
World War II a "new journalism which not only seeks
to explain as well as to inform; it even dares to teach, to
measure, to evaluate.“
 In 1887, Matthew Arnold was credited with coining the
term "New Journalism“
 Seymour Krim defined New Journalism as "a free
nonfictional prose that uses every resource of the best
fiction.“
 As subjective
journalism
 As form and technique
 As intensive reportage
 Telling the story using scenes rather than historical
narrative as much as possible
 Dialogue in full (Conversational speech rather than
quotations and statements)
 Point-of-view (present every scene through the eyes of
a particular character)
 Recording everyday details such as behavior,
possessions, friends and family
 A new reach
 A new speed
 New voices
 New digital ethics
 A new accountability
 A new mobility
 Live blogging
 Linked Data
 Living Stories
 Find and cultivate
sources/story ideas
 Follow story and news in
real time
 Reach readers where
they are
 Promote your work and
yourself
 Create loyal and engaged
reader community
Networking Publishing
Information Collaboration
The Wire
 Belam, Martin. "Journalism in the digital age: trends,
tools and technologies". 14 April 2010. 28 March 2018
<https://www.theguardian.com/help/insideguardian/
2010/apr/14/journalism-trends-tools-technologies>.
 Hallowell, Samantha. What Is New Journalism? 31
October 2016. 28 March 2018
<https://www.theodysseyonline.com/what-new-
journalism>.
New journalism

New journalism

  • 1.
     Name: GausvamiSurbhi  Paper No: 15  Sem:4  Submitted to: Dr. Dilip Barad  Department of English  MKBU university  Enrollment No: 2069108420170008  Roll No: 22  E-mail id: gausvamisurbhi17@gmail.com  Batch year: 2016-18
  • 2.
     New Styleof news writing and journalism  Developed in the 1960s and 1970s  It uses literary techniques  Subjective perspective  A literary style reminiscent of long-form non- fiction  Emphasizing "truth" over "facts,“  In contrast to traditional journalism
  • 3.
     The termwas codified by Tom Wolfe in a 1973  ’The New Journalism’  Includes works by Tom Wolfe, Truman Capote, Hunter S. Thompson, Norman Mailer, Joan Didion, Terry Southern, Robert Christgau, Gay Talese and others.  Kind of magazine
  • 4.
     John Hohenberg,in The Professional Journalist (1960), called the interpretive reporting which developed after World War II a "new journalism which not only seeks to explain as well as to inform; it even dares to teach, to measure, to evaluate.“  In 1887, Matthew Arnold was credited with coining the term "New Journalism“  Seymour Krim defined New Journalism as "a free nonfictional prose that uses every resource of the best fiction.“
  • 5.
     As subjective journalism As form and technique  As intensive reportage
  • 6.
     Telling thestory using scenes rather than historical narrative as much as possible  Dialogue in full (Conversational speech rather than quotations and statements)  Point-of-view (present every scene through the eyes of a particular character)  Recording everyday details such as behavior, possessions, friends and family
  • 7.
     A newreach  A new speed  New voices  New digital ethics  A new accountability  A new mobility  Live blogging  Linked Data  Living Stories
  • 8.
     Find andcultivate sources/story ideas  Follow story and news in real time  Reach readers where they are  Promote your work and yourself  Create loyal and engaged reader community
  • 9.
  • 12.
  • 13.
     Belam, Martin."Journalism in the digital age: trends, tools and technologies". 14 April 2010. 28 March 2018 <https://www.theguardian.com/help/insideguardian/ 2010/apr/14/journalism-trends-tools-technologies>.  Hallowell, Samantha. What Is New Journalism? 31 October 2016. 28 March 2018 <https://www.theodysseyonline.com/what-new- journalism>.