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Hardcover The Press Book

ISBN: 0195172833

ISBN13: 9780195172836

The Press

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

American democracy is built on its institutions. The Congress, the presidency, and the judiciary, in particular, undergird the rights and responsibilities of every citizen. The free press, for example, protected by the First Amendment, allows for the dissent so necessary in a democracy. How has this institution changed since the nation's founding? And what can we, as leaders, policymakers, and citizens, do to keep it vital?

The freedom of...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Brilliant, everyone in journalism must read this NOW!

"The Press" is perhaps one of the most important catalogs of journalistic criticism to be printed in the post-September 11, 2001 world. In it, Geneva Overhlser and Kathleen Hall Jamieson have organized the collected critical essays of America's, if not the English speaking world's best journalistic minds on behalf of the Annenberg Foundation. This is a daunting book to read, not because the writing fails to flow, but because the writing provokes such deep reflection on journalism and society at large that reading it is terribly time consuming. I could scarcely finish a single page before distraction by some new thought or idea put forth by the book's many authors sent me into long bouts of tangent thought. I was especially inspired by John Keane's essay on journalism and democratic ideals in the international environment. Also I must mention Theodore Glasser and marc Gunther's analysis of American journalistic autonomy, and Carolyn Marvin and Philip Meyer's thoughts on what kind of journalism best serves the public. All the essays are phenomenal, in fact, I fear that in recognizing these few authors I have diminished the tireless works of so many others. Each essay could stand alone as a five star rating. This book should be read in perpetuity, not just by future journalists and media scholars, but continually referenced by current ones. This book rightfully brings tremendous shame on sensational reporters like Nancy Grace, Greta van Susteren, Geraldo Rivera and the like without shaking an elitist finger at them. REVIEW EVERY BOOK YOU READ, WRITERS WANT AND DESERVE YOUR HONEST OPINIONS.

An impressively informed and informative body of work that no academic library Journalism Studies co

The second volume of the Oxford University Press series "Institutions of American Democracy", The Press is the collaborative editorial effort of Geneva Overholser (Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Reporting, Missouri School of Journalism Washington Bereau) and Kathleen Hall Jamieson (Elizabeth Ware Packard Professor of Communication, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania). After a general introduction to the press as an institution of American constitutional democracy, the essays contributed by noted scholars and academicians are organized into five sections: Orientations: The Press and Democracy in Time and Space; The Functions of the Press in a Democracy; Government and the Press: An Ambivalent Relationship; Structure and Nature of the American Press; and "The Future of News, The Future of Journalism". Additionally enhanced with an Afterword by Overholser and Jamieson, The Press is an impressively informed and informative body of work that no academic library Journalism Studies collection should be without. It is also highly recommended for non- specialist general readers with an interest in journalism and its relationship to democracy and the maintenance of democratic institutions and processes.

The Press

[...]As with everything in our lives the pendulum is never static. It usually swings too far to the right for a period of time then overcompensates by swinging too far to the left. It seldom spends a lot of time precisely balanced in the middle providing a perfect balance of left/right thinking and action. We've seen this with the dramatic growth of on-line "journalists" or breed that Dan Gillmor helped define in his book We the Media. Dan saw and chronicled the leading edge of many-to-many journalism. The new media approach that he sees isn't fading but it is gaining a balance as citizen journalists find that their opinion alone doesn't attract a lot of readers. As a result, they become of no import unless they develop and take a more traditional approach to their journalism in the gathering and dissemination of news and information. While we found Gillmor's book entertaining, we found The Press to be more interesting and analytical. The editors Overholser and Jamieson have done an excellent job of bringing together a more interesting, more informative and more balanced look at journalism's past, present and probable future. There is a discipline in journalism as in public relations that an individual isn't inherently born with. Instead as we are now seeing there are aspects, guidelines and approaches that people have to learn to be efficient and effective. The rush of proclaiming that everyone would soon be a journalist came and went and left a few people who were willing to dig out information of interest to a wide spectrum of readers and present facts as facts and opinion as opinion. The rest settled back into their lives of being active observers and occasional voices. The Press is a compilation of excellent essays by the country's leading journalism scholars and professionals. It does an excellent job of bringing together some of the best examinations of the American media's history, identity, roles and future. Unlike Gillmor who challenged his publisher, Knight-Ridder, the essay authors examine and discuss the much broader pallet of the press and its place in a democracy as well as its relationship with government, business and the public at large. The great thing about this book is that more than 30 highly respected journalists and educators efficiently and effectively covered the full spectrum of the press and its vital role in explaining and monitoring our democratic way of life. Individually and collectively they examined if citizens are getting the information they need and want. They put journalism under the microscope to examine yesterday's, today's and tomorrow's journalism requirements. They discuss how journalists have the ability and the responsibility to provide a balance between corporate/governmental interests and the public's interests. The individual authors show how the advances in technology have helped/forced the news media in general and journalists in specific to change to meet our ever ch
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