Ebook: All the news unfit to print: how things were-- and how they were reported
Author: Eric Burns
- Tags: Journalism, Objectivity, History Modern, 19th century, History Modern, 20th century, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES, Journalism, History Modern
- Year: 2009
- Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
- City: Hoboken, N.J
- Language: English
- azw3
Well-known media analyst Eric Burns looks at how journalists have misreported history in this follow-up to his critically acclaimed book Infamous Scribblers. In Infamous Scribblers, Eric Burns revealed how early American journalists represented and misrepresented the events and leaders of the day in coverage that was partisan, fabricated, scandalous, and sensationalistic, and sometimes stirring, brilliant, and Read more...
Abstract: Well-known media analyst Eric Burns looks at how journalists have misreported history in this follow-up to his critically acclaimed book Infamous Scribblers. In Infamous Scribblers, Eric Burns revealed how early American journalists represented and misrepresented the events and leaders of the day in coverage that was partisan, fabricated, scandalous, and sensationalistic, and sometimes stirring, brilliant, and indispensable. Now he puts the media under the microscope again, from Ben Franklin and Sam Adams through Mark Twain, William Randolph Hearst, H.L. Mencken, and Walter Duranty (arguably