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Taking Their Political Place - Journalists and the Making of An Occupation (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,385
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Taking Their Political Place - Journalists and the Making of An Occupation (Paperback)
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Early in the 19th century the work of American newspaper
journalists was intertwined with the work of politicians.
Journalists were primarily printers and editors, and newspapers
were largely political organs, funded and used by politicians for
political reasons. As the 19th century progressed, not only
journalists, but politicians, were involved in newspaper work.
Dooley explores the transformation of journalism, examining how
journalists established occupational boundaries separating their
work from that of politicians. She focuses on how an occupational
group that had been inseparable from party politics early in the
19th century grew to be seen by many in society as more distant and
independent from parties by the end of the century and became
accepted as the citizenry's primary provider of political news and
editorial opinion. This study of how journalists established
occupational boundaries will be of interest to scholars and
researchers of journalism history, political communication, and the
sociology of work.
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