| Topics in journalism |
| Professional issues |
|
Ethics & objectivity
Sources & attribution
News & news values
Reporting & writing
Fourth estate • Libel law
Education & books
Other topics
|
| Fields |
|
Advocacy journalism
Alternative journalism
Arts journalism
Business journalism
Citizen journalism
Fashion journalism
Investigative journalism
Literary journalism
Photojournalism
Science journalism
Sports journalism
Video game journalism
Video journalism
|
| Social impact |
|
Infotainment
"Infotainers" and personalities
News management
Distortion and VNRs
PR and propaganda
"Yellow journalism"
Press freedom
|
| News media |
|
Newspapers and magazines
News agencies
Broadcast journalism
Online and blogging
Alternative media
|
| Roles |
|
Journalist, reporter, editor, news presenter, photo
journalist, Columnist, visual journalist
|
|
Visual journalism is the practice of strategically combining words and images to convey information.
Universal
At a time of accelerating change, often words cannot keep pace with concepts. Visual journalism incorporates ancient
symbols that resonate with humans across cultures and across time and convey meaning
instantaneously at a deep level. Visual journalism is an outgrowth of the practice of graphic facilitation and recording that
began entering corporate board rooms, conferences, and think tank meetings in the 1970s with the leadership of David Sibbet, founder of The Grove Consultants International. But its roots date back to ancient
cave paintings and carry forward in the work of designers, architects, and engineers. Only
recently has interactive visualization of this sort moved out into common use in all kinds of group engagements. The scholarly
father of this visual form of communication is Robert Horn, Ph.D., a fellow at Stanford University who wrote the
book Visual Language.
Meaning is suggested
Visual journalism is not a series of symbols with precise meanings but rather images that suggest complex meanings and, in the
Egyptian tradition of the cartouche, contain words. The
symbols do not simply represent but participate in the meaning and, in combination with evocative phrases, are designed to
provoke creative thinking. Visual language is one tool described by author Daniel Pink in his
book A Whole New Mind for the emerging "conceptual age" where people must
tolerate ambiguity and communicate quickly, often before concepts are ready to be captured in traditional writing.
See also
- Broadcast journalism
- Photojournalism
- Video journalism
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)