Festival of Digital Storytelling
Influential figures from the world of digital storytelling and journalism will explore changing journalistic practices in a symposium at the University. Speaking as part of the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies' Festival of Digital Storytelling, Professor Jay Rosen of New York University and documentarian Daniel Meadows, a pioneer of the digital storytelling movement, will share their cutting edge and topical work on the direction of the industry. Taking place on Thursday 19 May 2016, the symposium will look at the new opportunities for sharing information and telling stories generated by social media, citizen journalism, user-generated content, platforms such as live blogs, as well as new presentational and investigative techniques associated with data journalism. It will also cover the challenges such rapid changes present for journalistic practices and professional identities. In his keynote address, Professor Rosen - a leading writer on journalism in the digital age - will reflect on his seminal essay The People Formerly Known as the Audience . He will suggest that audience thinking runs deeper than he originally thought and we can now ask: what was the audience? Daniel Meadows is a pioneer of community engagement, challenging the status quo and working in a collaborative way to capture extraordinary aspects of ordinary life. Drawing on his archive of digital stories, Daniel will share the 'felt life' of people who have participated in his many projects of over forty years.


