Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/115063
Título: Excessive, flexible and (still) seen as gender neutral Journalists' perceptions about their job during the Covid-19 pandemic
Autor: Alcantara, Juliana 
Simões, R. B. 
Palavras-chave: Covid-19 pandemic; feminism; journalism; newsroom practice; neoliberalism
Data: 22-Abr-2024
Editora: SAGE
Projeto: FCT PhD research grant number 2020.04647.BD 
Título da revista, periódico, livro ou evento: Journalism
Número: 0
Resumo: Mainstream newsroom routines have faced significant shifts in the last decades. Regardless of its nature, these changes can be seen from a gender perspective and framed within neoliberalism, seen as a structural force affecting people’s lives and an ideology of governance that shapes subjectivities. In this paper, we aim to discuss how neoliberalism influenced the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic on newsrooms and journalists’ working conditions from a gender lens. For this purpose, thirty semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted between October and December 2021 with Portuguese female and male junior and senior journalists of different levels of hierarchy working in mainstream media. Their perceptions of the pandemic impact on news production show the intersections of sexism and neoliberalism in the newsroom settings. Journalists accept as part of the job the long working hours and the personal cost of health protection material and essential equipment to work from home while normalising the work-home conflict as a private woman’s matter. These findings are discussed as reflecting how neoliberal logic has made the impacts of the pandemic heavier, especially for women.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/115063
DOI: 10.1177/14648849241244711
Direitos: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:I&D CES - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais
FLUC Secção de Comunicação - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

Mostrar registo em formato completo

Visualizações de página

158
Visto em 2/out/2024

Downloads

31
Visto em 2/out/2024

Google ScholarTM

Verificar

Altmetric

Altmetric


Este registo está protegido por Licença Creative Commons Creative Commons