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Jeremy Littau

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Jeremy Littau, Associate Professor of Journalism at Lehigh University

Jeremy Littau

Associate Professor

610.758.6520
jjl409@lehigh.edu
Coppee Hall
Education:

Ph.D., Journalism, The University of Missouri, 2009;

M.A., Journalism, The University of Missouri, 2007;

B.A., Communication: Journalism, Biola University, 1997

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Additional Interests

  • Networks
  • Social networks
  • Internet culture
  • Internet activism
  • Digital journalism

Research Statement

As a researcher, Jeremy Littau applies his interest in social forms of digital media. His work centers at the intersection of social media, community, social action, and political engagement. He has published work on Twitter, mobile video, participatory journalism, and digital communities in journals such as Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Electronic News, Community Journalism and Newspaper Research Journal. He was awarded the Frank Hook fellowship for 2015-17 for his research, teaching, and mentoring work at Lehigh, and his dissertation about digital communities and virtual "civic" life won the 2010 Nafziger-White-Salwen award for top dissertation from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
 

Biography

Jeremy Littau is a former journalist who specializes in teaching and researching digital media as an associate professor of journalism and communication at Lehigh. He worked in newsrooms for 10 years as both a reporter and editor, most recently with the Los Angeles Daily News until 2004. He did his graduate work at the Missouri School of Journalism (PhD '09, MA '07) and undergraduate study at Biola University (BA '97).

Littau specializes in digital media. He teaches courses in multimedia that include components on audio and video production, web building, social media, and interactive media. Engagement via social media and interactive digital products is a common thread in all his classes, helping students understand the possibilities that come with the social web in terms of story generation, research, production, and dissemination. He also teaches seminars at the intersection of media and society, including seminars on digital culture and the role of science fiction in society.

The backbone of his classes is an education in the essential elements necessary to succeed in modern news environments. As a professor trained in "The Missouri Method" of combining theory and practice, students in his classes learn how to apply theoretical and conceptual thinking to their media creation within rigorous courses that challenge them to think creatively. He stresses flexibility and adaptability, treating emerging digital media as a tool to do better journalism while also forming a deep understanding about the "why" behind the tool. Finally, his classroom values are centered on open publishing and access, respect for diverse views and methods, and self-directed curiosity that sees experimentation rewarded over following convention. In spring 2012 he was awarded the Lehigh Early Career Award for Distinguished Teaching, the top teaching honor given to professors at the assistant-professor level.

As a researcher, Littau applies his interest in social forms of digital media. His work centers at the intersection of social media, community, social action, and political engagement. He has published work on Twitter, mobile video, participatory journalism, and digital communities in journals such as Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Electronic News, Community Journalism and Newspaper Research Journal. He was awarded the Frank Hook fellowship for 2015-17 for his research, teaching, and mentoring work at Lehigh, and his dissertation about digital communities and virtual "civic" life won the 2010 Nafziger-White-Salwen award for top dissertation from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.

As an active scholar, Littau is known for his creative work in the digital journalism community. His Twitter account and professional blog have significant following and his thoughts on digital and social media have led to him being quoted by several media outlets producing stories on the latest in technology, society, and social media. He also is the co-host for the weekly Interchange Project podcast, which features weekly news and commentary on technology and the liberal arts.

Refereed publications

Jahng, M.R. & Littau, J. (2020). From Political to Personal: Tracking the Use of Exemplars in Newspaper Coverage of the Affordable Care Act. Journalism Practice, 16(1), 200-217. DOI: 10.1080/17512786.2020.1796761.

Stewart, D., Littau, J. (2016). Up, Periscope: Mobile Streaming Video Technologies, Privacy in Public, and the Right to Record. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 93(2), 312-331.

Littau, J., Jahng, M. (2016). Interactivity, Social Presence, and Journalistic Use of Twitter. #ISOJ, 6(1), 71-90.

Littau, J. (2016). Participatory news websites feature more opinion pieces. Newspaper Research Journal, 37(1), 70-81.

Jahng, M., Littau, J. (2016). Interacting is believing: Interactivity, social cue, and perceptions of journalistic credibility on Twitter. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 93(1), 38-58.

Littau, J. (2015). Time to “get” religion? An analysis of religious literacy among journalism students. Journal of Media and Religion, 14(3), 145-159.

Littau, J., Stewart, D. (2015). “Truthiness” and second-level agenda setting: Satire news and its influence on perceptions of television news credibility. Electronic News, 9(2), 122-136.

Littau, J. (2014). Web-network social capital: Exploring network actions and benefits for online community members. Community Journalism, 3(1), 46-71.

Brown, C., Hendrickson, E., & Littau, J. (2014). New Opportunities for Diversity: Twitter, Journalists and Traditionally Underserved Communities. Journal of Social Media Studies, 1(1), 1-16.

Sternadori, M. & Littau, J. (2012). With a little help from my friends: Motivations and patterns in social media use and their influence on perceptions of teaching possibilities. Journal of Media Education, 3(2), 5-20. [non-blind peer review]

Wise, K., Eckler, P., Kononova, A., & Littau, J. (2009). Exploring the hardwired for news hypothesis: How threat proximity affects the cognitive and emotional processing of health-related print news. Communication Studies, 60(3), 268-287.
 

Professional publications

Littau, J. (2022). “Congress’ Best Idea to Save Local Journalism Could Actually Hurt It.” Slate. https://slate.com/technology/2022/12/jcpa-journalism-competition-preser…

Littau, J. (2022). “Op-Ed: Thinking of Leaving Twitter? Its Experience is Hard to Replicate.” The Los Angeles Times. https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2022-12-02/twitter-alternatives-2…

Littau, J. (2019). “Five Myths About Journalism.” The Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/five-myths/five-myths-about-jour…

Littau, J. (2019). “The Crisis Facing American Journalism Did Not Start With The Internet.” Slate. https://slate.com/technology/2019/01/layoffs-at-media-organizations-the…

Littau, J. (2019). “Media’s Fatal Flaw: Ignoring the Mistakes of Newspapers.” Wired. https://www.wired.com/story/medias-fatal-flaw-ignoring-the-mistakes-of-…

Teaching

COMM 001 Media And Society
COMM 385 Digital Life and the Search for Meaning
JOUR 325 Internet Culture
ECK 081 Digital Identity in an AI World
JOUR 230 Multimedia Storytelling