Abstract:
The number of online newspapers has increased more than 50% since 2003.
Meanwhile, print newspapers’ circulation has declined in North America and most of
Europe. Since their first appearance in the early 1990s, online newspapers have attracted
the attention of both newspaper professionals and researchers because of their potential
impact on the news, business models, and readers. This thesis studies how far online
newspapers in Serbia, Great Britain and the United States have progressed in their
development of a news genre distinct from their print parents. Built on the premises of
genre theory, the thesis tests the applicability of Shepherd and Waters’ (1998)
classification of news cybergenres. Its methods include quantitative content analysis of 223
online newspaper front pages and a survey of online news personnel.
The results suggest that online newspapers in these three countries share many
characteristics with print newspapers, especially in terms of their content and form. The
biggest difference between the three sample groups is their use of various functionality
elements that promote readers’ active involvement in the news communication process.
Overall, online newspapers adoption of many of the Web’s unique tools is affecting
traditional journalistic practices. While they maintain their agenda‐setting function, there
are signs that newspapers’ gatekeeping role is changing into gate opening. Striking
differences between overall cultures and newspaper traditions in these three countries
provide an additional interpretation of the results, which surpasses technological
deterministic explanations.
Description:
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Elliot School of Communication