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Carl R. Osthaus examines the southern contribution to American
Press history, from Thomas Ritchie's mastery of sectional politics
and the New Orleans Picayune's popular voice and use of local
color, to the emergence of progressive New South editors Henry
Watterson, Francis Dawson, and Henry Grady, who imitated, as far as
possible, the New Journalism of the 1880s. Unlike black and reform
editors who spoke for minorities and the poor, the South's
mainstream editors of the nineteenth century advanced the interests
of the elite and helped create the myth of southern unity. The
southern press diverged from national standards in the years of
sectionalism, Civil War, and Reconstruction. Addicted to editorial
diatribes rather than to news gathering, these southern editors of
the middle period were violent, partisan, and vindictive. They
exemplified and defended freedom of the press, but the South's
press was free only because southern society was closed. This work
broadens our understanding of journalism of the South, while making
a valuable contribution to southern history.
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