From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For
Wikipedia guidelines, see Wikipedia:What is an
article.
News
Articles
A news article is an article published in a print or Internet news medium such as a newspaper, newsletter, news magazine, news-oriented website, or article
directory that discusses current or recent news of either
general interest (i.e. daily newspapers) or on a specific topic
(i.e. political or trade news magazines, club newsletters, or
technology news websites).
A news article can include accounts of eyewitnesses to the
happening event. It can contain photographs, accounts, statistics,
graphs, recollections, interviews, polls, debates on the topic,
etc. Headlines can be used to focus the reader’s attention on a
particular (or main) part of the article. The writer can also give
facts and detailed information following answers to general
questions like who, what, when,
where, why and how.
Quoted references can also be helpful. References to people can
also be made through written accounts of interviews and debates
confirming the factuality of the writer’s information and the
reliability of his source. The writer can use redirection to ensure
that the reader keeps reading the article and to draw her attention
to other articles. For example, phrases like "Continued on page 3”
redirect the reader to a page where the article is continued.
While a good conclusion is an important ingredient for newspaper
articles, the immediacy of a deadline environment means that copy editing often
takes the form of deleting everything past an arbitrary point in
the story corresponding to the dictates of available space on a
page. Therefore, newspaper reporters are trained to write in inverted
pyramid style, with all the most important information in the
first paragraph or two. If less vital details are pushed towards
the end of the story, the potentially destructive impact of
draconian copy editing will be minimized.
Feature
Articles
Feature articles are nonfiction articles that intend to inform,
teach or amuse the reader on a topic. The topic centers around
human interests. Feature stories may include conventions found in
fiction such as dialogue, plot and character. A feature article is
an umbrella term that includes many literary structures:
personality sketches, essays, how-to's, interviews and many
others.[1]
The following are examples of feature articles:
- Column — A short newspaper
or magazine piece that deals specifically with a particular field
of interest, or broadly with an issue or circumstance of
far-reaching scope. They appear with bylines on a regular basis
(daily, weekly, etc.). They may be written exclusively for one
newspaper or magazine, they may be marketed by a syndicate, or they
may be self-syndicated by the author.
- Essay — A
short, literary, nonfiction composition (usually prose), in which a
writer develops a theme or expresses an idea.
- Evergreen — A timeless article that editors
can hold for months and publish when needed. They need little or no
updating.[2]
- Exposé
— These articles use in-depth reporting with heavy research and
documentation. Used to expose corruption in business, politics or
celebrities. Also called the investigative article.[1][2]
- Filler — Short non-fiction items, usually just
under 300 words, used to fill in small spaces on a page of a
magazine or newspaper page.[3]
- How-to —
How-to articles help people to learn how to do something. They
provide step-by-step information for the reader.[4]
- Human interest story — An
article that involves local people and events and can be sold to
daily and some weekly newspapers. Human interest elements, such as
anecdotes or accounts of personal experiences, can support ideas in
magazine articles as firmly as facts or statistics. Also called
"true-life" stories.
- Interview —This feature story type
article includes the text of the conversation between two or more
people, normally directed by the interviewer. Interviews are often
edited for clarity. One common variation is the roundtable — the
text of a less organized discussion, usually between three or more
people.
- Op-Ed — Articles that run opposite
the editorial page. They are a response to current editorials and
topical subjects. Political op-eds are the most common, but they
don't have to be limited to politics. They should, however, reflect
items that are current and newsworthy.
- Personal experience — An
article in which the writer recounts an ordeal, process or event he
has undergone.
- Personality Profile — A personal or
professional portrait — sometimes both — of a particular
individual.[4]
- Seasonal — An article written about a holiday,
a season of the year or a timely observance. This kind of article
will be submitted months in advance of the anticipated publication
date.[4]
- Service Article — An article about a consumer
product or service; it outlines the characteristics of several
versions of the same type of commodity. The aim is to help a
potential purchaser to make the best selection possible.[2]
- Sidebar — A short feature
that accompanies a news story or magazine article. It elaborates on
human interest aspects of the story, explains one important facet
of the story in more depth or provides additional factual
information — such as a list of names and addresses — that would
read awkwardly in the body of the article. Can be found in a box,
separated from the main article on the side or bottom of the
page.[1]
- Travel
literature — Travel articles inform and enlighten the
reader through facts about a region's landscape, scenery, people,
customs and atmosphere.[1]
Other
types of articles
Text
articles
- Academic paper — is an
academic article published in an academic
journal. The status of academics is often dependent both on how
many articles they have had published and on the number of times
that their articles are cited by authors of other articles.
- Blog — Some styles of blogging are
more like articles. Other styles are written more like entries in a
personal journal.
- Encyclopedia
article — In an encyclopedia or other reference work,
an article is a primary division of content.
- Marketing article — An often
thin piece of content which is designed to draw the reader to a
commercial website or product.
- Usenet
articles — are messages written in the style of e-mail
and posted to an open moderated or unmoderated Usenet
newsgroup.
Spoken
articles
- In the general context, this term refers to articles produced
in the form of audio recordings. They are also referred to
as podcasts.
- With reference to Wikipedia, this term usually refers to audio
recordings of Wikipedia articles. These are produced by members of
WikiProject Spoken Wikipedia.
Listicles
- Articles whose primary content is a list
See: Listicle
Elements
of an article
Headline
A headline is text at
the top of a newspaper article, indicating the nature of the
article. The headline catches the attention of the reader and
relates well to the topic. Modern headlines are typically written
in an abbreviated style omitting many elements of a complete
sentence but almost always including a non-copula verb.
Lead
The lead
(sometimes spelled lede) sentence captures the attention
of the reader and sums up the focus of the story. The lead also
establishes the subject, sets the tone and guides the reader into
the article.[5]
In a news story, the introductory paragraph tells the most
important facts and answers the questions: who,
what, where, when, why, and
how. In a feature story, the author may choose to open in
any number of ways, including the following:[1]
Body
- For the news story, details and elaboration are evident in the
body of the news story and flow smoothly from the lead.
- Quotes are used to add interest and support to the story.
- The inverted pyramid is used with most
news stories.
A feature article will follow a format appropriate for its type.
Structures for feature articles may include, but are not limited
to:[5]
- chronological — the article may be a narrative of some
sort.
- cause and effect — the reasons and results of an event or
process are examined.
- classification — items in an article are grouped to help aid
understanding
- compare and contrast — two or more items are examined
side-by-side to see their similarities and differences
- list — A simple item-by-item run-down of pieces of
information.
- question and answer — such as an interview with a celebrity or
expert.
Conclusion
One difference between a news story and a feature article is the
conclusion. Endings for a hard news article occur when all of the
information has been presented according to the inverted
pyramid form. By contrast, the feature article needs more
definite closure.[6]
The conclusions for these articles may include, but are not limited
to:[4]
- a final quote
- a descriptive scene
- a play on the title or lead
- a summary statement
Characteristics of
well-written articles
- Article is usually on a well defined topic or topics that are
related in some way, such as a factual account of a newsworthy
event.
- The writer is objective and shows all sides to an issue.
- The sources for this news story are identified and are
reliable.
- Show,
don't tell.
Authorship
Publications obtain articles in a few different ways:
- staff written — an article may be written by a
person on the staff of the publication.
- assigned — a freelance writer may be asked to write an
article on a specific topic.
- unsolicited — a publication may be open to
receiving article manuscripts from freelance writers.
See also
Notes
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Polking, Kirk, Writing A to Z. Writer's Digest Books:
1990. ISBN 0898795567, pp. 136, 143, 224, 422, 497
- ^ a
b
c
Wilson, John M., The Complete Guide to Magazine Article
Writing. Writer's Digest Books: 1993. ISBN 0898795478, pp. 19,
21, 32, 37-38
- ^ Boggess, Louise, How
to Write Fillers and Short Features That Sell. Harper &
Row: 1981. ISBN 0060104929, pp. 70-83
- ^ a
b
c
d
Wray, Cheryl Sloan, Writing for Magazines: A Beginner's
Guide. NTC Publishing: 1990. ISBN 0844259616, pp. 8, 31, 50,
96-97
- ^ a
b
Jacobi, Peter, The Magazine Article: How to Think It, Plan It,
Write It. Writer's Digest Books: 1991, ISBN 0898794501, pp.
50-77, 90
- ^ Sova, Dawn, How to
Write Articles for Newspapers and Magazines. Thomson Arco:
2002. ISBN 076891089X, pp. 1, 87
External
links