The Gamification of Digital Journalism: Innovation in Journalistic Storytelling

May 28, 2021
book cover
David O. Dowling
ISBN: 
9780367076252

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This book examines the brief yet accelerated evolution of newsgames, a genre that has emerged from puzzles, quizzes, and interactives augmenting digital journalism into full-fledged immersive video games from open-world designs to virtual reality experiences.

Critics have raised questions about the credibility and ethics of transforming serious news stories of political consequence into entertainment media, and the risks of trivializing grave and catastrophic events into mere games. Dowling explores both the negatives of newsgames, and how the use of entertainment media forms and their narrative methods mainly associated with fiction can add new and potentially more powerful meaning to news than traditional formats allow. The book also explores how industrial and cultural shifts in the digital publishing industry have enabled newsgames to evolve in a manner that strengthens certain core principles of journalism, particularly advocacy on behalf of marginalized and oppressed groups.

Cutting-edge and thoughtful, The Gamification of Digital Journalism is a must-read for scholars, researchers, and practitioners interested in multimedia journalism and immersive storytelling.


About David O. Dowling

Associate Professor David O. Dowling is on the faculty of the University of Iowa School of Journalism and Mass Communication. His work in digital media and journalism studies centers on developments in publishing industries that drive markets and cultural production.

Dowling's previous books include Immersive Longform Storytelling: Media, Technology, Audience (2019);  A Delicate Aggression: Savagery and Survival in the Iowa Writers’ Workshop (2019); Surviving the Essex: The Afterlife of America’s Most Storied Shipwreck (2016); Emerson’s Protégés: Mentoring and Marketing Transcendentalism’s Future (2014); Literary Partnerships and the Marketplace: Writers and Mentors in Nineteenth-Century America (2012); The Business of Literary Circles in Nineteenth-Century America (2011); Chasing the White Whale: The Moby-Dick Marathon; or, What Melville Means Today (2010); and Capital Letters: Authorship in the Antebellum Literary Market (2009). In addition, he regularly publishes in prominent journals. He joined the Iowa faculty in 2006.