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Partisan Journalism - A History of Media Bias in the United States (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,043
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Partisan Journalism - A History of Media Bias in the United States (Paperback)
Series: Communication, Media, and Politics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In Partisan Journalism: A History of Media Bias in the United
States, Jim A. Kuypers guides readers on a journey through American
journalistic history, focusing on the warring notions of
objectivity and partisanship. Kuypers shows how the American
journalistic tradition grew from partisan roots and, with only a
brief period of objectivity in between, has returned to those roots
today. The book begins with an overview of newspapers during
Colonial times, explaining how those papers openly operated in an
expressly partisan way; he then moves through the Jacksonian era's
expansion of both the press and its partisan nature. After
detailing the role of the press during the War Between the States,
Kuypers demonstrates that it was the telegraph, not professional
sentiment, that kicked off the movement toward objective news
reporting. The conflict between partisanship and
professionalization/objectivity continued through the muckraking
years and through World War II, with newspapers in the 1950s often
being objective in their reporting even as their editorials leaned
to the right. This changed rapidly in the 1960s when newspaper
editorials shifted from right to left, and progressive advocacy
began to slowly erode objective content. Kuypers follows this trend
through the early 1980s, and then turns his attention to
demonstrating how new communication technologies have changed the
very nature of news writing and delivery. In the final chapters
covering the Bush and Obama presidencies, he traces the growth of
the progressive and partisan nature of the mainstream news, while
at the same time explores the rapid rise of alternative news
sources, some partisan, some objective, that are challenging the
dominance of the mainstream press. This book steps beyond a simple
charge-counter-charge of political bias in the news in that it
offers an argument that the press in America, except for a brief
period, was essentially partisan from its inception and has
returned with a vengeance to its original roots. The final argument
presented in the book is that this new development may actually be
healthy for American Democracy.
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