'Reportage' sometimes refers to the total body of media coverage of a particular topic or event, including news reporting and analysis: "''the extensive 'reportage' of recent events in x''." This is typically used in discussions of the media's general tone or angle or other collective characteristics.
'Reportage' is also a term for an eye-witness genre of journalism: an individual
journalist's report of
news, especially when witnessed firsthand, distributed through the
media. This style of reporting is often characterized by travel and careful observation.
'Literary reportage' is the
art of blending documentary, reportage-style observations, with personal experience, perception, and anecdotal evidence, in a non-fiction form of
literature. This is perhaps more commonly called
creative nonfiction and is closely related to
New Journalism. The
prose of such reporting tends to be more polished and longer than in newspaper articles.
Etymology
All forms have a common route, being adapted into English in the late 19th century from the
French word of the same spelling.
See also
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Reportage Festival, Sydney
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creative nonfiction
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New Journalism
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Photojournalism
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Report
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Reporter
External links
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Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage
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HERODOTUS AND THE ART OF NOTICING Ryszard Kapuściński emphasises
Herodotus's ambition to understand the world, and claims his as the originator of the genre of 'reportage'.