“Accurate, independently gathered information is as necessary to our way of government as the right to vote. This book by veteran journalists is the best analysis I’ve seen of the precarious state of American journalism and the danger that alone poses to our democracy.” —Bob Schieffer, CBS News, author of Overload: Finding Truth in the Deluge of News

“For a journalist like myself, on the road for 50 years, Inside the Upheaval of Journalism is a walk down memory lane, recalling, in some cases, the hard road both Blacks and women traveled to realize their dreams of becoming reporters. But the book’s seasoned journalists also bring us into the present with great clarity and sometimes painful insight. They confront the challenges veterans and newcomers face as technology changes the reporting dynamic ever faster, but not always with good results. And yet, the love of the profession is constant, as is the desire to help a new generation appreciate that their job remains, as always, to faithfully record our country’s journey toward a more perfect union.” —Charlayne Hunter-Gault, award-winning journalist and author

In the spring of 1969, 101 students received master’s degrees from Columbia University’s prestigious School of Journalism, where they had learned the trade as it was then practiced. Most hoped to start a career in newspapers, radio, television or magazines, the established forms of journalism of that era. Little did they realize how the news world they were entering would be upended by the internet and by the social forces that would sweep through the country over the next 50 years. This book tells the story of the news media revolution through the eyes of those in the Class of 1969 who lived it and helped make it happen. It is an insider’s look at the reshaping of the Fourth Estate and the information Americans now get and don’t get—crucial aspects of the vibrancy of democracy.
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This book tells the story of the news media revolution through the eyes of those in the Class of 1969 who lived it and helped make it happen. It is an insider’s look at the reshaping of the Fourth Estate and the information Americans now get and don’t get—crucial aspects of the vibrancy of democracy.
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List of Illustrations – Preface – Acknowledgments – Chapter Authors – Martin Gottlieb/Susan Spencer: Fifty Years of Journalism: A Sweep of Change – Kenneth Tiven: Technology: The Revolution of Our Time – Dotty Brown: Women: Forging Towards Recognition – Marquita Pool-Eckert: Diversity: A Work in Progress – Alan Ehrenhalt: Politics: Reporting in the Age of Distrust – Michèle Montas-Dominique: International Reporting: A World of Difference – Ted Gest: Criminal Justice: The Journey from "Give Me Rewrite!" – Richard Knox: Medicine: From Gee-Whiz to Hard-Edged – David E. Gumpert: Business: How Big Media Missed Small and Personal – Tammy Tanaka: Covering the God Beat in a Time of Change – Carla Fine: Book Publishing: Authors on the Front Line – Tom Goldstein: J-Schools: In the Wake of New Media – Allan Mann: An Informed News Consumer’s View – Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781433167782
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Vekt
328 gr
Høyde
225 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Series edited by
Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Ted Gest has covered criminal justice over a half-century for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, U.S. News & World Report, and The Crime Report, where he is Washington correspondent. He is president of Criminal Justice Journalists and former Chairman of the Council of National Journalism Organizations. He is author of Crime & Politics (2001).

Dotty Brown oversaw numerous prize-winning stories during her career at the Philadelphia Inquirer, including a Pulitzer Prize. She served as Science and Medical Editor, Education Editor, and Editor for Multimedia and Projects. She was named Knight Ridder Journalist of the Year. She is author of Boathouse Row, Waves of Change in the Birthplace of American Rowing (2016).