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E-raamat: Key Readings in Journalism

Edited by (Loyola University Maryland, USA), Edited by (Lincoln University, UK)
  • Formaat: 424 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Nov-2012
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781135767600
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  • Formaat: 424 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Nov-2012
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781135767600
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Key Readings in Journalism brings together over thirty essential writings that every student of journalism should know. Designed as a primary text for undergraduate students, each reading was carefully chosen in response to extensive surveys from educators reflecting on the needs of today’s journalism classroom. Readings range from critical and historical studies of journalism, such as Walter Lippmann’s Public Opinion and Michael Schudson’s Discovering the News, to examples of classic reporting, such as Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward’s All the President’s Men. They are supplemented by additional readings to broaden the volume’s scope in every dimension, including gender, race, and nationality. The volume is arranged thematically to enable students to think deeply and broadly about journalism—its development, its practice, its key individuals and institutions, its social impact, and its future—and section introductions and headnotes precede each reading to provide context and key points for discussion.

Arvustused

"Key Readings in Journalism truly constitutes a greatest hits in the field of journalism studies. All the classics, past and present, are here. This book belongs on the bookshelf of anyone who thinks about or studies the news. It is ideal for classroom use."

Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

"Key Readings in Journalism's selections cumulatively answer the important questions of why journalism is necessary and important, why it must be of the highest possible quality, and what the dangers may be when it isn't. Its selections will inspire scholars at all levels to want to read more of the excerpted works, and to seriously think about what journalism's other key readings might be."

Dane S. Claussen, Editor, Journalism & Mass Communication Educator

Acknowledgments viii
Introduction: what we should know 1(8)
SECTION I The Development of Journalism
9(80)
Introduction
11(2)
1 Discovering The News
13(13)
Michael Schudson
2 A Place in the News
26(14)
Kay Mills
3 Technology and Ideology: the Case of the Telegraph
40(15)
James W. Carey
4 The African American Newspaper
55(9)
Pat Washburn
5 Comparative Media History
64(13)
Jane L. Chapman
6 Free for All: the Internet's Transformation of Journalism
77(12)
Elliot King
SECTION II Doing Journalism
89(84)
Introduction
91(4)
7 Deciding What's News
95(10)
Herbert Gans
8 The Face of War
105(11)
Martha Gellhorn
9 The Race Beat
116(20)
Gene Roberts
Hank Klibanoff
10 The First Casualty
136(18)
M. Phillip Knightley
11 All the President's Men
154(11)
Carl Bernstein
Bob Woodward
12 The Girls in the Balcony
165(8)
Nan Robertson
SECTION III Biography
173(82)
Introduction
175(4)
13 Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print and Power
179(10)
James McGrath Morris
14 The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens
189(11)
Lincoln Steffens
15 Margaret Bourke White: A Biography
200(19)
Vicki Goldberg
16 Murrow: his Life and Times
219(15)
A. M. Sperber
17 Breaking Barriers
234(10)
Carl Rowan
18 Personal History
244(11)
Katherine Graham
SECTION IV Classic Reporting
255(66)
Introduction
257(2)
19 Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All its Phases
259(7)
Ida Wells-Barnett
20 A History of Standard Oil Company
266(14)
Ida Tarbell
21 Ernie's War
280(10)
David Nichols
22 Silent Spring
290(9)
Rachel Carson
23 In Cold Blood
299(12)
Truman Capote
24 The Boys on the Bus
311(10)
Timothy Crouse
SECTION V Journalism and Society
321(86)
Introduction
323(4)
25 Democracy in America
327(12)
Alexis De Tocqueville
26 Public Opinion
339(12)
Walter Lippmann
27 The Brass Check
351(6)
Upton Sinclair
28 A Free and Responsible Press: the Hutchins Committee Response
357(11)
Robert D. Leigh
29 The Press
368(12)
A. J. Liebling
30 Manufacturing Consent: the Political Economy of the Mass Media
380(18)
Edward S. Herman
Noam Chomsky
31 On Television and Journalism
398(9)
Pierre Bourdieu
Permissions 407(3)
Index 410
Elliot King is Professor and Chair in the Communication Department at Loyola University Maryland.

Jane Chapman is Professor of Communications in the School of Journalism at Lincoln University, and is a Visiting Fellow at Wolfson College Cambridge.