“Bargaining With Patriarchy”: Newsroom Experiences of Women Journalists in Turkey and Greece
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Date
2024
Authors
Sevda Alankuş
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Volume Title
Publisher
University of Southern California
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Abstract
According to feminist news critics news structure has a gender. It is “masculine” because the codes and ethics of journalism have been designed in male-ordered newsrooms. Do female journalists make a difference in the news or is journalism gender-blind? What strategies interventions and initiatives are women journalists developing (if they ever can) to cope with androcentric newsroom culture and practices? What are the consequences of their bargaining with patriarchal newsroom hierarchies and practices? The rich news criticism literature’s answers to these questions are as complementary as contradictory. Based on in-depth interviews with journalists from Turkey and Greece this article pictures the hegemanic newsroom culture of the two countries and discusses the bargaining and/or consenting strategies of women journalists with masculinity through rereading the participant narrations. © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Feminist News Criticism, Greek Media, Greek Women Journalists, Turkish Media, Turkish Women Journalists, Women Journalists, Greek Media, Turkish Women Journalists, Turkish Media, Feminist News Criticism, Greek Women Journalists, Women Journalists
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Source
International Journal of Communication
Volume
18
Issue
Start Page
2780
End Page
2798
SCOPUS™ Citations
1
checked on Apr 09, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
1
checked on Apr 09, 2026
