This collection of essays provides a critical and scholarly
assessment of muckraking journalists at the beginning of the
twentieth century. Contributors discuss how spiritual values led
journalists to seek social change, through crusades and expos
DEGREESD'es, sometimes at the price of public confusion and
cynicism. They explore how the richest church in America was forced
to clean up its tenement houses, how a Buffalo newspaper crusaded
for improvements in living conditions for immigrants, why women
journalists were keys to civic improvement efforts, and how
muckraking and the crusading spirit permeated the press even in
small towns. The authors place these stories in the context of
various facets of early 20th century American culture.
These fresh perspectives on America's first investigative
reporters will appeal to media scholars, historians and to
professional journalists. An epilogue appeals for a return to the
values and spirit of the muckrakers that might spur the public's
interest and provide a moral center and ethic of caring in American
journalism.
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