The New Journalism: The Underground Press, the Artists of Nonfiction, and Changes in the Established Media |
Contents
Truman Capote | 43 |
New Journalists Writing on the General Scene | 85 |
The Youth and Radical | 117 |
Copyright | |
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activities American Library audience awareness Black Panthers Brackman California Capote Capote's concerned convention Copyright counterculture creative discuss dissent drugs edited editor Esquire established media established press example experience facts ghetto Ginsberg Haight-Ashbury Hell's Angels Hersey's Hersh high schools hippie Hoffman I. F. Stone important involved Jacob Brackman Jimmy Breslin journalistic journalistic style journalistic writing kind of journalism Kozol's Kunen Liberation News Service life-styles lives magazines ment militant moral Movement Muckrakers Mungo newspapers Norman Mailer Notes to Pages novel novelist Pentagon police political published Pump House Gang Radical Scene Random House reader relevant reportage revolution revolutionary rhetoric rock journalism rock music Rolling Stone San Francisco says sense sexual significant story Strawberry Statement Susan Sontag television Three Major Stylists tions Tom Wolfe underground papers underground press Vietnam Village Voice Wolfe Wolfe's York Youth and Radical