Upheaval: Disrupted lives in journalism
By (Author) Andrew Dodd
Edited by Matthew Ricketson
UNSW Press
UNSW Press
1st June 2021
Australia
General
Non Fiction
079.94
Paperback
368
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Newsrooms were these crazy universities, full of experts on the strangest things, people with real understanding and experience of things that mattered, places where you could ask anybody anything, though you might get your head bitten off if you interrupted someone on deadline. Youve also got company, noise, yahooing and jokes. I discovered Im made for that kind of place. David Marr
Newsrooms, the engine rooms of reporting, have shrunk. A generation of journalists has borne witness to seismic changes in the media. Sharing stories from more than 50 Australian journalists including Amanda Meade, David Marr and Flip Prior Upheavalreveals the highs and the lows of those who were there to see it all.
They show us life inside frenetic and vibrant newsrooms at the peak of their influence, and the difficulties of adapting to ever-accelerating news cycles with fewer resources. Some left journalism altogether while others stayed in the media or sought to reinvent it. Normally the ones telling other peoples stories, in Upheaval journalists share the rawness of losing their own job or watching others lose theirs. They reveal their anxieties and hopes for the industrys future and their commitment to reporting news that matters.
'InUpheavaljournalists do something they normally avoid. They turn the spotlight on themselves and their industry. They narrate a brutal transition at a critical moment in the media. This oral history documents the culture of Australian journalism before the internet extemporising, sexist, booze-fuelled and brash and reveals the private pain of the digital dislocation for many journalism lifers who had to reshape their professional identities. Upheaval puts readers in the newsroom as the rivers of gold dried up.' Katharine Murphy
'Essential reading for those who care about journalism and its struggle to survive. This book captures the essence of what it is to be a reporter amid tectonic shifts in the media and in the world that we strive to make sense of for our audiences. Anyone who follows the news and politics will be absorbed byUpheaval.' Nick McKenzie
Andrew Dodd is the director of the Centre for Advancing Journalism and an Associate professor of journalism at the University of Melbourne. He was a broadcaster at ABC Radio National, where he presented several programs and launched the Media Report.
Matthew Ricketson has worked as an academic and journalist for four decades. He has worked on staff at The Age, The Australian and Time Australia magazine, among others. He has run journalism programs in three universities RMIT, University of Canberra and now Deakin University, where he is a professor of communications.