This epilogue argues that time matters in journalism’s operation but is not sufficiently considered in its study. It focuses on the temporal expectations associated with the digital environment, highlighting problems with an overemphasis on the present in studies of news production, a lack of temporality in discussions of news engagement, and a failure to consider the temporal depletion associated with journalism’s future.
AndersonB (1983) Imagined Communities. London: Verso Books.
5.
BarnhurstK (2011) The problem of modern time in journalism. KronoScope11(1–2): 98–123.
6.
BodkerH (2016) The times(s) of news websites. In: FranklinBEldridgeS (eds) The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 55–63.
7.
CraigG (2016) Reclaiming slowness in journalism. Journalism Practice10(4): 461–475.
8.
DayanDKatzE (1992) Media Events. New York: Oxford University Press.
9.
DeweyJ (1929) The Quest for Certainty: A Study of the Relevance of Knowledge. New York: Minton, Balch & Company.
10.
EdyJ (1999) Journalistic uses of collective memory. Journal of Communication49(2): 71–85.
11.
FinkKSchudsonM (2014) The rise of contextual journalism, 1950s–2000s. Journalism15(1): 3–20.
12.
HallET (1959) The Silent Language. Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Publications.
13.
KosellekR (2004) Futures past: On the Semantics of Historical Time. New York: Columbia University Press.
14.
LangKLangGE (1989) Collective memory and the news. Communication11: 123–139.
15.
Le MausurierM (2016) What is slow journalism?Journalism Practice9(2): 138–152.
16.
McTaggartJ (1908) The unreality of time. Mind17: 457–473.
17.
NeigerMTenenboim-WeinblattT (2016) Understanding journalism through a nuanced deconstruction of temporal layers in news narratives. Journal of Communication66(1): 139–160.
18.
PattersonT (1998) Time and news: The media’s limitations as an instrument of democracy. International Political Science Review19(1): 55–67.
19.
PhillipsA (2012) Sociability, speed and quality in the changing news environment. Journalism Practice6(5–6): 669–679.
20.
ReichZGodlerY (2014) A time of uncertainty: The effects of reporters’ time schedule on their work. Journalism Studies15(5): 607–618.
21.
SchlesingerP (1977) Newsmen and their time-machine. British Journal of Sociology28(3): 336–350.
22.
SchudsonM (1986) When: Deadlines, datelines and history. In: ManoffRKSchudsonM (eds) Reading the News. New York: Pantheon Books, pp. 79–108.
23.
SchudsonM (1992) Watergate in American Memory: How We Remember, Forget and Reconstruct the Past. New York: Basic Books.
Tenenboim-WeinblattKNeigerM (2015) Print is future, online is past: Cross-media analysis of temporal orientations in the news. Communication Research42(8): 1047–1067.
TuchmanG (1978) Making News. New York: The Free Press.
28.
Wagner-PacificiR (2010) Theorizing the restlessness of events. American Journal of Sociology115(5): 1–36.
29.
WildholmA (2015) Tracing online news in motion. Digital Journalism4(1): 24–40.
30.
ZelizerB (2016) What Journalism Could Be. Cambridge: Polity Press.
31.
ZelizerB (1991) From home to public forum: Media events and the public sphere. Journal of Film and Video43(1–2): 69–79.
32.
ZelizerB (1992) Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
33.
ZelizerB (1993) Journalists as interpretive communities. Critical Studies in Mass Communication10: 219–237.
34.
ZelizerB (2015) Terms of choice: Uncertainty, journalism and crisis. Journal of Communication65(5): 888–908.