From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era

Since 2016, we have been living in what many scholars call a ‘post-truth era,’ which is said to be dominated by mistrust, misinformation, anti-expert populism, and out-right science denial. Usually, this story focuses on technical issues in our information sphere, or on the public’s failings. Conver...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gordon Katic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: J-Schools Canada / Écoles-J Canada 2024-05-01
Series:Facts & Frictions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-public-deficits-to-public-defects-katic/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846151887977447424
author Gordon Katic
author_facet Gordon Katic
author_sort Gordon Katic
collection DOAJ
description Since 2016, we have been living in what many scholars call a ‘post-truth era,’ which is said to be dominated by mistrust, misinformation, anti-expert populism, and out-right science denial. Usually, this story focuses on technical issues in our information sphere, or on the public’s failings. Conversely, I am informed by critical approaches in science studies that stress how public mis/understanding of science is symptomatic of deeper social and political divides between experts and publics. In that spirit, this polemical article focuses its critical attention on science itself, and more specifically the journalists who disseminate their work. I conduct an exploratory critical discourse analysis on a small selection of the most popular and critically-acclaimed journalists of science, research, and expertise (including Michael Lewis, Ezra Klein, Ed Yong, and others). My analysis reveals an emerging model of science communication for the post-2016 era. Earlier, journalists embraced a public deficit model that assumed a deficient public could be paternalistically educated towards accepting scientific insights. Today, that view is being supplemented (and sometimes supplanted) by something I call the public defect model. In this model, journalists see publics as cognitively defective, and therefore resistant—if not outright impervious—to intelligent persuasion. My paper contributes new theoretical insights to the study of science journalism. Furthermore, I offer a polemical intervention against the creeping anti-democratic tendencies of some of the most well-respected journalists of our time, as well as suggestions for journalists and journalism educators who wish to combat these tendencies.
format Article
id doaj-art-1eb58f6297c74c3ca5c6fbee7d138942
institution Kabale University
issn 2816-2366
language English
publishDate 2024-05-01
publisher J-Schools Canada / Écoles-J Canada
record_format Article
series Facts & Frictions
spelling doaj-art-1eb58f6297c74c3ca5c6fbee7d1389422024-11-27T03:16:04ZengJ-Schools Canada / Écoles-J CanadaFacts & Frictions2816-23662024-05-01322238http://doi.org/10.22215/ff/v3.i2.05From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth EraGordon Katic0https://orcid.org/0009-0000-3106-2528University of TorontoSince 2016, we have been living in what many scholars call a ‘post-truth era,’ which is said to be dominated by mistrust, misinformation, anti-expert populism, and out-right science denial. Usually, this story focuses on technical issues in our information sphere, or on the public’s failings. Conversely, I am informed by critical approaches in science studies that stress how public mis/understanding of science is symptomatic of deeper social and political divides between experts and publics. In that spirit, this polemical article focuses its critical attention on science itself, and more specifically the journalists who disseminate their work. I conduct an exploratory critical discourse analysis on a small selection of the most popular and critically-acclaimed journalists of science, research, and expertise (including Michael Lewis, Ezra Klein, Ed Yong, and others). My analysis reveals an emerging model of science communication for the post-2016 era. Earlier, journalists embraced a public deficit model that assumed a deficient public could be paternalistically educated towards accepting scientific insights. Today, that view is being supplemented (and sometimes supplanted) by something I call the public defect model. In this model, journalists see publics as cognitively defective, and therefore resistant—if not outright impervious—to intelligent persuasion. My paper contributes new theoretical insights to the study of science journalism. Furthermore, I offer a polemical intervention against the creeping anti-democratic tendencies of some of the most well-respected journalists of our time, as well as suggestions for journalists and journalism educators who wish to combat these tendencies.https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-public-deficits-to-public-defects-katic/science communicationscience journalismpolitics of expertisepost-truthmisinformationdeficit modeldefect modelcovid-19populismtechnocracy
spellingShingle Gordon Katic
From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
Facts & Frictions
science communication
science journalism
politics of expertise
post-truth
misinformation
deficit model
defect model
covid-19
populism
technocracy
title From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
title_full From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
title_fullStr From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
title_full_unstemmed From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
title_short From public deficits to public defects: How journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the Post-Truth Era
title_sort from public deficits to public defects how journalists embraced technocratic explanations for the post truth era
topic science communication
science journalism
politics of expertise
post-truth
misinformation
deficit model
defect model
covid-19
populism
technocracy
url https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-public-deficits-to-public-defects-katic/
work_keys_str_mv AT gordonkatic frompublicdeficitstopublicdefectshowjournalistsembracedtechnocraticexplanationsfortheposttruthera