Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-27T00:42:17.020Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The ‘Rumours’ of Journalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Emmanuel Taïeb*
Affiliation:
University of Paris 1-Sorbonne

Extract

Studies of the phenomenon of rumour can no longer avoid paying particular attention to recent transformations of structures in the public sphere. On the one hand, the central role of media in the classification of items of information as ‘rumours’ and in their subsequent publicization and dissemination has become entrenched. On the other, rumours have come to be treated not just as simple pieces of information but rather as a dimension of the political or secular interchange that goes on within larger or smaller groups. These two paradigmatic hypotheses have been recently advanced notably by Pascal Froissart (2002) and Philippe Aldrin (2005). Froissart has shown that our awareness of rumours is very largely moulded by the major place accorded to them in the media, and that many so-called rumours said to have been spontaneously generated from within the body of society in fact find their origin and their channels of propagation effectively within the media itself. For his part, Aldrin would break with the standard interpretation of rumour content as often reflective of the shifting nature of collective psychology, substituting for this, notably for rumours of a political type, a ‘transactional’ approach, by which the rumour is analysed as a form of information that enters circulation in the course of everyday interactions, or ones linked to potential political outcomes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © ICPHS 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aldrin, P. (2005) Sociologie politique des rumeurs [Political Sociology of Rumour]. Paris: PUF.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baudis, D. (2005) Face à la calomnie [In the Face of Calumny]. Paris: XO Editions - Le grand livre du mois.Google Scholar
Campion-Vincent, V. (2005a) ‘From Evil Others to Evil Elites: A Dominant Pattern in Conspiracy Theories Today’, in Fine, Campion-Vincent and Heath (2005).Google Scholar
Campion-Vincent, V. (2005b) La société parano. Théories du complot, menaces et incertitudes [Society in Paranoia. Conspiracy Theories, Threats and Uncertainties]. Paris: Payot.Google Scholar
Collard, F. (2005) ‘Arafat, Mahomet et le poison’, L’Histoire (February): 295295.Google Scholar
Daney, S. (1996) ‘Notes on Saló’ [1983], in La rampe. Paris: Cahiers du cinéma.Google Scholar
Dayan, D. (2002) ‘Remarques sur le 11 septembre: Osama, Baudrillard et le Karaoké’, Perspectives psychiatriques 41(4).Google Scholar
Delcayre, A. (2003) ‘Mesurer l’impact d’un démenti’, Stratégies, 1283-4.Google Scholar
Etchegoin, M.-F. & Aron, M. (2005) Le bûcher de Toulouse. D’Alègre à Baudis: histoire d’une mystification [Burnt at the Stake in Toulouse. Alègre, Baudis and the Story of a Deception]. Paris: Grasset.Google Scholar
Fine, G. A and Khawaja, I. (2005) ‘Celebrating Arabs and Grateful Terrorists. Rumor and the Politics of Plausibility’, in Fine, Campion-Vincent and Heath (2005).Google Scholar
Fine, G. A., Campion-Vincent, V. and Heath, C. (eds) (2005) Rumor Mills: The Social Impact of Rumor and Legend. New Brunswick and London: Aldine Transaction.Google Scholar
Froissart, P. (2002) La rumeur. Histoire et fantasmes [Rumour: History and Fantasies]. Paris: Belin.Google Scholar
Langlois, J. L. (2005) ‘“Celebrating Arabs”: Tracing Legend and Rumour Labyrinths in Post 9/11 Detroit’, Journal of American Folklore 118: 468468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyssan, T. (2002) 9/11: The Big Lie. Paris: Carnot.Google Scholar
Meyssan, T. (ed.) (2006) Pentagate. Paris: Carnot.Google Scholar
Montiglio, S. (1994) ‘Prises de parole, prises de silence dans l’espace public athénien [Speechmaking and deliberate silence in the Athenian public space]’, Politix 2626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neveu, E. (2003) ‘De l’art (et du coût) d’éviter la politique. La démocratie du talk-show version française (Ardisson, Drucker, Fogiel)’, Réseaux 118118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renard, J.-B. (2005) ‘Negatory Rumours. From Denial of Reality to Conspiracy Theory’, in Fine, Campion-Vincent and Heath (2005).Google Scholar
Roussel, M. (2004) Homicide 31. Au cœur de l’affaire Alegre [Homicide 31. At the Heart of the Alègre Affair]. Paris: Denoël.Google Scholar
Taguieff, P.-A. (2004) Prêcheurs de haine. Traversée de la judéophobie planétaire [Preachers of Hate. Survey of World-wide Judeophobia]. Paris: Mille et une nuits.Google Scholar
Taguieff, P.-A. (2005) La foire aux Illuminés. Ésotérisme, théorie du complot, extrémisme [The Cranks’ Convention: Esoterics, Conspiracy Theorists, Extremists]. Paris: Mille et une nuits.Google Scholar
Taïeb, E. (2003) ‘De quelques rumeurs après le 11 septembre 2001 [Concerning certain post 9/11 rumours]’, Quaderni, 50/5150/51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taïeb, E. (2005) ‘Rumeurs politiques et régime médiatique: la mort d’Arafat [Political rumour and media processes in Arafat’s death]’, Quaderni, 5858.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Venner, F. (2005) L’effroyable imposteur. Quelques vérités sur Thierry Meyssan [The Frightful Impostor. A Few Truths about Thierry Meyssan]. Paris: Grasset.Google Scholar
Vitkine, A. (2005) Les nouveaux imposteurs [The New Impostors]. Paris: Doc en Stock-Editions de la Martinière.Google Scholar