Детальная информация
Название | Journalism's ethical progression: a twentieth-century journey |
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Другие авторы | Mellinger Gwyneth ; Ferré John P., |
Коллекция | Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция |
Тематика | Journalistic ethics — History ; Journalistic ethics. ; EBSCO eBooks |
Тип документа | Другой |
Тип файла | |
Язык | Английский |
Права доступа | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) |
Ключ записи | on1126347046 |
Дата создания записи | 22.10.2019 |
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Сеть | Интернет |
"Using case studies and historical analysis, this book traces changes in ways that journalists understood their ethical responsibilities during the pre-internet twentieth century. Each chapter in this book explores a historical development in the evolution of journalists' perceptions of their role as professionals"--.
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- Cover
- Journalism’s EthicalProgression
- Journalism’s EthicalProgressionA Twentieth-Century Journey
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- A Profession Ripe for Change
- The Democratic Paradox in Journalism
- Chapter Summaries
- Notes
- Chapter 1
- The Progressive Era’s Social Awakening and the Soul of the News
- The Awakening of the Social Consciousness
- Journalism and the Awakening
- The Soul of Journalism
- The Soulless Corporation
- Notes
- Chapter 2
- A “Failure to Take Itself Seriously”
- Background
- The Canons Created
- The Crisis
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 3
- The Lippmann-Dewey “Debate”
- Construction of the Dewey-Lippmann “Debate”
- Dewey’s Theory of Journalism
- Lippmann’s Early Theory of Journalism
- Lippmann’s Disillusionment and Dewey’s Response
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 4
- Francis Biddle and the Jennings Case in 1934–1935
- The American Newspaper Guild and Dean Jennings
- Francis Biddle’s Background
- Francis Biddle and the Jennings Case
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 5
- Dorothy Day and The Catholic Worker’s Legacy of Pacifism
- The Spanish Civil War
- Catholic Ideology
- Social Institutions: The Church Hierarchy
- Media Organization: A Movement and a Workplace
- News Gathering from the Grassroots and the Heart
- Personalism and Journalism
- Weathering Flak
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 6
- War Correspondents, Women’s Interests, and World War II
- The U.S. Military and the War Correspondent, 1941–1943
- The Military and the Woman’s Angle, 1941–1943
- The Woman’s Angle as Opportunity, 1943–1944
- The Woman’s Angle as Obstacle, 1943–1944
- New Regulations for Women War Correspondents, 1944
- About Face, 1945
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 7
- Conflicts of Interest in Journalism
- Recalibrating Ethical Norms
- A Clash of Sensibilities
- The Syndicate Party Controversy
- Change and Resistance
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 8
- Ethical Duty and the Right to Know
- Associating Press Freedom with a Right to Know
- The Right to Know about Public Business
- Crusading for Freedom of Information and Press Freedom
- Press Freedom as a Means Rather than an End
- Calling for Editors to Protect Press Freedom and the Right to Know
- Emphasizing Benefits of Press Freedom to Fair Trial Rights and People’s Right to Know
- Emphasizing Secrecy and Censorship at the Source of Criminal Justice Information
- Notes
- Chapter 9
- “Blackening Up Journalism”
- Ethics and Inclusivity
- Theorizing the Ethical Struggle
- Ethical Tensions within Goal 2000
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Conclusion
- Index
- About the Contributors