Magazine Journalism
- Tim Holmes - Cardiff University, UK
- Liz Nice - Suffolk New College
"For those of us who long ago experienced the magazine love-bite and have been battling the prejudice and scant attention shown this beautiful medium ever since, here at last is the book to set the record straight."
- Nicholas Brett, Deputy Managing Director, BBC Magazines
- Stuart Allan, Professor of Journalism, Bournemouth University
Magazines are the most successful media format ever to have existed: so begins Magazine Journalism as it traces how magazines arose from their earliest beginnings in 1665 to become the ubiquitous format we know today. This book combats the assumptions among media academics as well as journalists that magazines somehow don't count, and presents a compelling assessment of the development and innovation at the heart of magazine publishing.
In magazines we find some of the key debates in journalism, from the genesis of 'marketing to the reader' to feminist history, subcultures and tabloidization. Embedding these questions in a thoroughly historical framework, Holmes and Nice argue for an understanding of magazine journalism as essential in the media landscape.
Moving beyond the semiotic and textual analysis so favoured by critics of the past, the authors complete the story with an exploration of the production and consumption of magazines. Drawing on interviews with more than 30 magazine journalists across the industry, what emerges is a story of resilience, innovation and a unique ability to embrace new markets and readerships.
Magazine Journalism takes the reader to the heart of key questions in the past, present and future of journalism and is essential reading for students across journalism and the creative industries.
For those of us who long ago experienced the magazine love-bite and have been battling the prejudice and scant attention shown this beautiful medium ever since, here at last is the book to set the record straight. Magazine Journalism is a painstakingly researched argument, whistling up the many voices of those who matter in magazines today, drawing on magazines' rich history and their ability to adapt and change to survive, exploring the mixed and vibrant economy that underpins the medium, and demonstrating that the future is as much an opportunity as a threat. Holmes and Nice make a compelling case for magazines being 'the most successful media format ever to have existed
Nicholas Brett
Deputy Managing Director, BBC Magazines
With a mixture of observations from the past and present, Holmes and Nice offer a skillful analysis of the contemporary magazine field while keeping an eye to the industry's future. Although the book's focus is on magazines in the United Kingdom, its lessons are an enlightening and entertaining resource for American magazine scholars and students as well
David Abrahamson
Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University
At a time when magazines are undergoing active redefinition, Magazine Journalism represents a welcome intervention. It engages with a host of pressing issues in a manner alert to professional priorities while, at the same time, encouraging new ways of thinking about the challenges shaping this fast-moving field. Holmes and Nice are trustworthy guides, taking the reader on what proves to be a fascinating journeyl
Stuart Allan
Professor of Journalism, Bournemouth University
A comprehansiev review of the state of the magazine industry with an insider's knowledge of the working methods of magazine journalists and how they have adapted successfully to the digital age. A must read for all students.
A good theory-based book for students at level 6 considering research in magazine-based journalism.
Using painstaking research it re-defines the image of today's magazines and looks to the future as digital attempts to march over the traditional news-stand
An interesting series of essays, useful to journalism undergraduates.
Timely and relevant for a fast-changing landscape, giving a much-needed scholarly overview, valuable industry insights and practical advice for students.
A good book for third year students.
Very well organized and underlying specific issues that totally relate to one of the courses I teach. Loved it.