Description

Book Synopsis
A major volume bringing together the writings of one of the world's leading media scholars. Brings together some of Schudson's most influential pieces of the past decade with some pieces previously unpublished in English and a significant new introduction which reflects on the major themes and directions of the work.

Trade Review
"Michael Schudson, among the best of the academic writers on the media, has seen in the raucousness and hype of newspapers a pearl beyond price: the instinct to create trouble for the establishment, the panjandrums - them."
Financial Times

"Schudson brings to his analysis an equanimity often missing among media critics. Uniquely among scholars of contemporary media, he is well steeped in American history and the history of ideas. Schudson's key argument in his eloquent new book is that it is the everyday reporting by the press, often pedestrian, often of trivial occurrences, that holds the powerful to account and limits their power to control what the public knows."
Australian Book Review

"There's been a publishing boom in recent years in volumes pursuing the special relationship between media and democracy. Many hit the mark, but few hit it so convincingly and enjoyably, and in so few pages, as Schudson's."
Australian Journal of Political Science

"Schudson is the best writer on journalism I know."
John Lloyd, The Herald's Books of the Year

"In this sharp and engaging little book ... Michael Schudson has launched a debate that can lead to a normative theory of journalism's purpose in the era of the internet."
Tim Luckhurst, Times Higher Education

"A considered, fresh argument that points out often-overlooked contributions to democracy made by the unlovable press."
M/C Reviews

"Schudson does an excellent job of pointing out that the press needs to be free to adequately provide the people with information that they need to form judgments about the government."
Books On-Line

"Makes a strong case for an independent press in a democracy, particularly the US."
Long Range Planning

"Among contemporary American scholars working on media and politics, Michael Schudson is easily the wisest. This wonderful book shows why. Its case for thinking differently about journalism and democracy is compelling. There are pearls galore: wise remarks on subjects like the abuse of power, the functional necessity of truth, the decline of the newspaper, the rise of expertise, and the growing importance to democracy of efforts to monitor power publicly."
John Keane, Centre for the Study of Democracy, University of Westminster

"There are many reasons the press is unlovable, and irresponsible. Readers will find these enumerated in Michael Schudson’s important book. But readers will also find an eloquent argument about the vital role an independent press plays in a democracy, and why an 'annoying' journalist can advance the public interest just as surely as a President."
Ken Auletta, author and New Yorker media writer

"A sparkling set of essays on journalism and democracy by one of the world’s foremost media scholars. It alternates between defending the commonplace and attacking the holiest of sacred cows, making you want to rush to the next page of this brilliant, elegant and learned book."
James Curran, Goldsmiths, University of London



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vi

1 Introduction: facts and democracy 1

2 Six or seven things news can do for democracy 11

3 The US model of journalism: exception or exemplar? 27

4 The invention of the American newspaper as popular art, 1890–1930 40

5 Why democracies need an unlovable press 50

6 The concept of politics in contemporary US journalism 63

7 What’s unusual about covering politics as usual 77

8 The anarchy of events and the anxiety of story telling 88

9 Why conversation is not the soul of democracy 94

10 The trouble with experts – and why democracies need them 108

Notes 126

Index 141

Why Democracies Need an Unlovable Press

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    A Hardback by Michael Schudson

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      View other formats and editions of Why Democracies Need an Unlovable Press by Michael Schudson

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 26/09/2008
      ISBN13: 9780745644523, 978-0745644523
      ISBN10: 074564452X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A major volume bringing together the writings of one of the world's leading media scholars. Brings together some of Schudson's most influential pieces of the past decade with some pieces previously unpublished in English and a significant new introduction which reflects on the major themes and directions of the work.

      Trade Review
      "Michael Schudson, among the best of the academic writers on the media, has seen in the raucousness and hype of newspapers a pearl beyond price: the instinct to create trouble for the establishment, the panjandrums - them."
      Financial Times

      "Schudson brings to his analysis an equanimity often missing among media critics. Uniquely among scholars of contemporary media, he is well steeped in American history and the history of ideas. Schudson's key argument in his eloquent new book is that it is the everyday reporting by the press, often pedestrian, often of trivial occurrences, that holds the powerful to account and limits their power to control what the public knows."
      Australian Book Review

      "There's been a publishing boom in recent years in volumes pursuing the special relationship between media and democracy. Many hit the mark, but few hit it so convincingly and enjoyably, and in so few pages, as Schudson's."
      Australian Journal of Political Science

      "Schudson is the best writer on journalism I know."
      John Lloyd, The Herald's Books of the Year

      "In this sharp and engaging little book ... Michael Schudson has launched a debate that can lead to a normative theory of journalism's purpose in the era of the internet."
      Tim Luckhurst, Times Higher Education

      "A considered, fresh argument that points out often-overlooked contributions to democracy made by the unlovable press."
      M/C Reviews

      "Schudson does an excellent job of pointing out that the press needs to be free to adequately provide the people with information that they need to form judgments about the government."
      Books On-Line

      "Makes a strong case for an independent press in a democracy, particularly the US."
      Long Range Planning

      "Among contemporary American scholars working on media and politics, Michael Schudson is easily the wisest. This wonderful book shows why. Its case for thinking differently about journalism and democracy is compelling. There are pearls galore: wise remarks on subjects like the abuse of power, the functional necessity of truth, the decline of the newspaper, the rise of expertise, and the growing importance to democracy of efforts to monitor power publicly."
      John Keane, Centre for the Study of Democracy, University of Westminster

      "There are many reasons the press is unlovable, and irresponsible. Readers will find these enumerated in Michael Schudson’s important book. But readers will also find an eloquent argument about the vital role an independent press plays in a democracy, and why an 'annoying' journalist can advance the public interest just as surely as a President."
      Ken Auletta, author and New Yorker media writer

      "A sparkling set of essays on journalism and democracy by one of the world’s foremost media scholars. It alternates between defending the commonplace and attacking the holiest of sacred cows, making you want to rush to the next page of this brilliant, elegant and learned book."
      James Curran, Goldsmiths, University of London



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements vi

      1 Introduction: facts and democracy 1

      2 Six or seven things news can do for democracy 11

      3 The US model of journalism: exception or exemplar? 27

      4 The invention of the American newspaper as popular art, 1890–1930 40

      5 Why democracies need an unlovable press 50

      6 The concept of politics in contemporary US journalism 63

      7 What’s unusual about covering politics as usual 77

      8 The anarchy of events and the anxiety of story telling 88

      9 Why conversation is not the soul of democracy 94

      10 The trouble with experts – and why democracies need them 108

      Notes 126

      Index 141

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