IALJS's Mission Statement
The mission of the International Association for Literary Journalism
Studies is the improvement of scholarly research and education in Literary
Journalism/Reportage -- not journalism about literature but journalism
that is literature. To accomplish this, the association's activities
include: encouraging critical and cross-cultural scholarly research and
inquiry in the field of Literary Journalism; enhancing the standards of
content and instruction in Literary Journalism courses; promoting a sense
of public service and professional responsibility among both scholars
and practitioners of Literary Journalism; fostering close and continuing
relationships between academe and the profession; and increasing the understanding
and awareness among professionals and academics of the importance of Literary
Journalism -- a genre also known around the world as literary reportage,
narrative journalism, creative nonfiction, the New Journalism, Jornalismo
Literário, el periodismo literario, Bao Gao Wen Xue,
literary nonfiction and narrative nonfiction. Key association programs
in support of its mission include its annual international scholarly conference
and the publication of its scholarly journal, Literary Journalism Studies.
There is no single description of the genre, but the following definitions
help to establish a meeting ground for its critical study.
"The art and craft of reportage-journalism marked by vivid description,
a novelist's eye to form, and eyewitness reporting that reveals hidden
truths about people and events that have shaped the world we know." --
Granta
"Reportage Literature is an engagement with reality with a novelist's
eye but with a journalist's discipline." -- Pedro Rosa Mendes, Portugal
"I think one of the first things for literary reportage should be to go
into the field and to try to get the other side of the story. Reportage
should give a fresh vision of a topic." -- Anne Nivat, France
"A good reportage must not necessarily be linked with topical or political
events which are taking place around us. I think the miracle of things
lies not in showing the extraordinary but in showing ordinary things in
which the extraordinary is hidden." -- Nirmal Verma, India
It is a "journalism that would read like a novel . . . or short story."
-- Tom Wolfe, United States
Such definitions are not comprehensive and may at times conflict, but
they should help to establish an understanding of this fundamentally narrative
genre, which is located at the intersection of literature and journalism.
At the critical center of the genre lies cultural revelation in narrative
form. Implicit to the enterprise are two precepts: (a) that there is an
external reality apart from human consciousness, whatever the inherent
problems of language and ideology that may exist in comprehending that
reality, and (b) that there are consequences in the phenomenal world,
whether triggered by human or natural agency, that result in the need
to tell journalistically based narratives empowered by the use of literary
technique.
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