A History of NewsWhat is news? Why are we so eager to exchange it? Why does it so often seem sensational? How does the way news is gathered and presented affect our politics and our lives? A History of News, Third Edition, provides an extended, international history of journalism that ranges from preliterate societies to the digital age. It examines the strengths and weaknesses of news and provides unique insights into contemporary journalism. Author Mitchell Stephens, an accomplished writer and media critic, analyzes news in all of its manifestations--spoken, written, visual and digital--from an international perspective. For the third edition, Stephens has broadened the scope of the book's international coverage, expanded the section on television news, increased coverage of women and minorities and added new material on the Internet and the digital revolution. The book also features an updated timeline, questions at the end of each chapter and new boxes, many of which underline connections between older news systems and issues in contemporary journalism. |
From inside the book
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Contents
Introduction 1 | 9 |
Why News?The Thursty Desyer That All Our Kynde | 9 |
News in Preliterate SocietiesIn the Ordinary Way | 16 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
17th century acta advertising American Journalism appeared arrived audience ballads battle began beginning Bennett Boston British broadcast broadsides Cicero circulation Cited coffeehouses communication copies Corantos Courante uyt Italien coverage criers crime Dahl daily death early editor England English Corantos English Newspaper Europe example exchange facts French Fugger gather Gazette gossip handwritten Henry historian Horace Greeley human interest issue James Gordon Bennett John Joseph Pulitzer journalists King L'Information en France letter London Mott murder newsbooks newscasts newsletters Newspaper in England newspapers newssheets newsworthy pamphlet paper Paris perhaps Periodical Newsbooks political printed newspapers printers printing press published radio Raymond Firth readers reports reprinted Revolution Roman Rome rumor Seguin Shaaber society spread story surviving telegraph television Thomas Thomas Deloney Thucydides Tikopia tion United Venice weekly William word of mouth writing written wrote York Herald York Tribune Zulus