Ładuje się......
The war correspondent /
1. autor: | |
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Format: | Printed Book |
Wydane: |
London ; Sterling, Va. :
Pluto Press,
c2002.
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Hasła przedmiotowe: | |
Dostęp online: | Table of contents Contributor biographical information Publisher description |
Spis treści:
- Machine generated contents note: PART I: The War Correspondent in History
- 1 Introduction 3
- 2 The War Correspondent 6
- Motivation 6 Tradition 19 Concluding Remarks 23
- 3 From Telegraph to Satellite: The Impact of Media Technology on War Reporting 24
- The Telegraph 25 Photography 29 Newsreel Film 34
- Radio 35 Television 38 Satellite, cable and the digital information age 40 Concluding Remarks 44
- PART II: The War Correspondent in the War Zone
- 4 Journalists in the War Zone: From Crimea to Korea 47
- The Crimean War, 1854-56 49 The American Civil War,1861-65 51
- From the 'Golden Age' to World War, 1865-1914 54
- The Second World War, 1939-45 63
- The Korean War, 1950-53 68 Concluding Remarks 71
- 5 Journalists and the Military since Vietnam 73
- The Vietnam War, 1965-75 73 The Falklands War,1982 78
- Direct censorship and control of the news media by the MoD in the South Atlantic 79
- Restraints imposed by the lobby briefing system 79
- Self-censorship by journalists 80
- Implications 81
- The American Invasion of Grenada, 1983 83
- The American Invasion of Panama, 1989 86
- The Persian Gulf War, 1991 88
- The news pools 89
- The briefings and news conferences 93
- Media responses to Iraqi propaganda in the Persian Gulf War 95
- Bosnia and the 'Embedded Media' 97
- Concluding Remarks 99
- 6 Lessons Learned? The Media, the Military and the Kosovo Crisis 103
- Bombing Iraq, 1998 103
- Bombing Serbia, 1999 108
- Claim and counterclaim: TV news assesses the evidence 112
- Concluding Remarks 122
- PART III: The War Correspondent in Crisis
- 7 Reporting the Cold War and the New World Order 127
- The Cold War and the Enemy Image 131 Reporting
- nuclear disarmament and the peace movement 134 The
- impact of glasnost and perestroika on the enemy
- image 137 News in a Post-Cold War Era: A Crisis in the
- Journalistic Framework 141 'Don't tread on us' 150
- Concluding Remarks 151
- 8 War, Objectivity and the Journalism of Attachment 153
- 'The Facts Belong to History': Objectivity and its
- Origins 155 Objectivity Under Fire 161 War and the
- New Journalism 163 'A Twisted Sort of Therapy': The
- Journalism of Attachment Critique 166 'Honest
- Journalism' and the 'Attitude of Clarity' 177 Concluding
- Remarks 180
- 9 'Something Must Be Done' Journalism 182
- Media Attention 184 Media Influence on Policy-Making
- 188 Information and Information Management 194
- Concluding Remarks 196
- PART IV: Conclusions
- 10 Conclusion 201
- Appendix 1 Recommendations to News Organisations for
- Journalists' Safety 208
- Appendix 2 Surviving Hostile Regions 209
- Appendix 3 MoD Green Book Rules for Media Reporting 211
- Appendix 4 US Military Ground Rules for Media Reporting
- of the Persian Gulf War 212
- Notes 213
- Bibliography 219
- Index 229.