Carlson and Lewis have set out to explore how journalism is demarcated from non-journalism. The succeed by compiling a set of contributions that seamlessly portray a picture of the shaping of those boundaries and how they are transforming today... In the current fast-paced transformative epoch of journalism, this book is a valuable and timely contribuition to journalism studies.
Raul Ferrer Conill, Karlstad University, Sweden, Digital Journalism
Carlson (St. Louis Univ.) and Lewis (Univ of Minnesota) contribute admirably to scholarship about boundary work in journalism by pulling together well-honed research by recognized scholars... The book excels because contributors apply relevant theory and original research to examine a particular subject within the larger context of how journalists go about the task of protecting and expanding the boundaries of the practice.
J. L. Aucoin, University of South Alabama, Recommended Review in CHOICE
As emerging forms blur the line between media writ large and the realm culturally acknowledged as journalism, the concepts of boundaries and boundary work become vital tools for scholarly sense-making. Carlson and Lewis make an immense contribution to journalism studies, bringing together an international group of scholars to explicate these concepts that both highlight journalism's universal traits and identify it as contextually unique.
Dan Berkowitz, Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Iowa, USA
Carlson and Lewis expertly weave together a variety of thoughtful conceptual and methodological perspectives on boundary work in journalism. The compelling contributions to this outstanding volume offer key insights into cultural, political, technological and economic factors influencing the construction of boundaries between journalists and audiences related to news practices, participants and professional norms.
Bonnie Brennen, Nieman Professor of Journalism, Diederich College of Communication, Marquette University, USA
Boundaries of Journalism provides an apposite intervention into the uncertainties surrounding definitions of journalism and journalists. The collection provides an eclectic mixture of perspectives looking at the social and material changes affecting journalism in the 21st century. The book provides a further building block in advancing the maturity of journalism studies
Howard Tumber, Director of Research, Graduate School of Journalism, City University London, UK