
Routledge, 2009.Įxplorations in Communication and History. The Changing Faces of Journalism: Tabloidization, Technology and Truthiness. Open University Press, 2010.Ībout to Die: How News Images Move the Public. “Journalism in the Service of Communication.” Journal of Communication, 2011. “When Practice is Undercut by Ethics,” in Ethics of Media. “Why Journalism Has Always Pushed Perception Alongside Reality,” in Assessing Evidence in a Postmodern World.


“On the Shelf Life of Democracy in Journalism Scholarship.” Journalism, 2013. “Tools for the Future of Journalism.” Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies, 2013. “Terms of Choice: Uncertainty, Journalism, and Crisis.” Journal of Communication, 2015. “Journalism's Deep Memory: Cold War Mindedness and Coverage of Islamic State.” International Journal of Communication, 2016. “Communication in the Fan of Disciplines.” Communication Theory, 2016. She is currently working on a manuscript entitled How the Cold War Drives the News. She is a former Judge of the Peabody Awards for Excellence in Electronic Media, and her work has been translated into French, Korean, Turkish, Romanian, Chinese, Italian, Spanish, Hebrew, and Portuguese. Zelizer is also a media critic, whose work has appeared in The Nation, PBS News Hour, CNN, The Huffington Post, Newsday, Liberation, and other media organizations.Ĭoeditor of Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism and former Director of the Scholars Program in Culture and Communication, she is a past President of the International Communication Association, where she is also a Fellow, and a Distinguished Scholar of the National Communication Association. She is also a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship a Freedom Forum Center Research Fellowship a Fellowship from Harvard University’s Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy a Fellowship from the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies a Fulbright Senior Scholar a Fellowship from Stanford University’s Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and an ACLS Fellowship. Zelizer is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and, in 2021, she was elected as a fellow of the British Academy. Anderson), was published by Polity Press in 2021.

She has authored or edited fifteen books, including the award-winning About To Die: How News Images Move the Public (Oxford, 2010) and Remembering to Forget: Holocaust Memory Through the Camera's Eye (Chicago, 1998), and over 150 articles, book chapters, and essays. Her latest book, The Journalism Manifesto(co-authored with Pablo Boczkowski and C.W. A former journalist, Zelizer is known for her work on journalism, culture, memory, and images, particularly in times of crisis. Barbie Zelizer is the Raymond Williams Professor of Communication and Director of the Center for Media at Risk at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication.
