News stories provide an essential confirmation of our ideas about who we
are, what we have to fear, and what to do about it: a marketplace of
ideas, shopped by rational citizen decision makers but also a shared
resource for grounding our contested narratives of identity in objective
reality. News as a fundamental social process comes into being not when
an event takes place or when a report of the event is created but when
that report becomes news to someone. As it moves off the page into the
community, news discovers - through its interpretations - its reality in
the lives of the consumers. This book explores the path of news as it
moves through the tangled labyrinth of social identities and asserted
interests that lie beyond the page or screen. The language and
communication-oriented study of news promises a salient area of
investigation, pointing the way to an expansion, if not a redefinition
of basic anthropological ideas and practices of ethnography, participant
observation, and "the field" in the future of anthropological research.