Description
Book SynopsisHarvey Tyson has followed the dictates of his itch' to write for over 70 years. He is probably best remembered for his byline in many respected newspapers, in SA and abroad, when he was a full-time news journalist for 44 years particularly as editor-in-chief of the Johannesburg Star for 16 years in the days of apartheid South Africa.
Table of ContentsPart 1 – The nature of the beast: 1. Setting the scene; 2. Press mogul pisses on the people; 3. Profile of a journalist; 4. Household names in the writing trade; 5. Mischievous misprints; 6. Dangerous misprints; 7. Best writing: fiction or non-fiction?; 8. Reports from a green and pleasant land; Part 2 – Telling it like it is: 9. A fearful spectacle, defying censorship; 10. Journalists’ eyewitness accounts; 11. The Dead Hand; 12. The Berlin Wall; 13. In the fog: Wat ye Tyler and other Stirring Tales; 14. Africa’s greatest war; 15. Master spy and global murders; 16. ‘The bravest editor in the cemetery’; 17. The Times vs. ‘Jack the Ripper’ Part 3 – Past and the future of the press: 18. Pulitzer and the birth of ‘popular’ newspapers; 19. The Press Barons who wanted to be Emperors; 20. US Champions of press freedom; 21. The man who saved South Africa’s ‘black’ press; 22. The price of true and constant independence; 23. Beware the disguised enemy within; 24. Murdoch the mighty media manager ... Mmmm; 25. It depends how you use ‘Independence’; 26. When ‘independence’ becomes a fake; 27. How the Past could affect the world’s Future; 28. Online investigators bring down the President; 29. In search of a place to talk freely; 30. Conflict and the Press; 31. The end of mainstream newspapers; 32. The future of journalism; Index; Acknowledgements.