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Republic of Denial: Press, Politics, and Public Life
 
 
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Republic of Denial: Press, Politics, and Public Life [Anglais] [Relié]

Michael Janeway

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Descriptions du produit

From Publishers Weekly

These are bad times for both the American press and American politics, observes Janeway in his broad overview of the linked machinery of politics and journalism. Hemorrhaging its own credibility, today's media establishment seems more embattled than ever. The same could be said of American politics: a disaffected public has traded confidence in democracy for jaded cynicism. Those two conditions add up to a recipe for disaster, writes Janeway, a former editor-in-chief at the Boston Globe who now directs the National Arts Journalism Program at Columbia University. He argues that a confluence of forces in both the news business and politics has plunged America into a dark night of the soul, from which we are unlikely to awaken anytime soon. Sketching the jarring trajectory of our nation after such events as the Bay of Pigs debacle, Kennedy's assassination and, of course, Vietnam, Janeway plugs in other variables such as the consolidation of print and broadcast media and the insatiable appetite of 24-hour cable news. The upshot is that the quality most needed by journalists nowAa critical skepticism toward governmentAis being replaced by market research at newspapers driven more by the bottom line than a sense of civic duty. While Janeway's thesis is not strikingly original, those interested in how headlines are made will appreciate his analysis of the crumbling barrier between the newsroom and the boardroomAand the dismaying notion that serious journalism has itself become just one more niche market. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

"Politics in the United States today is almost universally disdained for falsity and shrillness. The media in the United States are widely condemned for bad practices and attitudes," writes Janeway in the opening sentence of this thoughtful analysis of the relationship among the press, the political process, and the public interest. Examining the reasons for this disdain, Janeway (journalism, Columbia Univ.), a former editor of the Boston Globe and the Atlantic Monthly, warns that Americans are in "a democratic crisis in a republic of denial." He focuses here on the print media but also looks at the impact that broadcast media (particularly round-the-clock coverage and "tabloid TV") have had on news delivery. He also describes questionable business practices that have eroded some media independence and integrity. Readable and well documented, this work is recommended for public libraries and highly recommended for political science and communication collections in academic libraries.AJill Ortner, SILS, SUNY at Buffalo
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

The New York Times Book Review, Jeff Greenfield

Janeway clearly has the gift of synthesis: while there is virtually no original reporting in Republic of Denial, he brings to bear everything from market research to novels in support of his thesis.

Mark Jurkowitz, Boston Globe

"Fast-paced but far-reaching. . . . challenges tinkerers and tweakers to recognize that the nation is in deeper trouble than they might think." --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .

Book Description

This book offers the most insightful critique of the decline of American journalism and politics in decades. Drawing on years of experience in the news business, politics, and government, Michael Janeway shows how profound changes in these worlds relate to each other and to deepening public alienation. Neither the press nor the political system is likely to recover its standing, the author concludes, without taking into account their interrelationship. In a new preface, Janeway discusses recent events that bear out his premise. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .

About the author

Michael Janeway has been editor of the Boston Globe, executive editor of Atlantic Monthly, and dean of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He also served as special assistant to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance from 1977 to 1978. He is a professor at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and director of the National Arts Journalism Program. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .
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