Before Journalism Schools Before Journalism Schools
Journalism in Perspective

Before Journalism Schools

How Gilded Age Reporters Learned the Rules

    • 33,99 €
    • 33,99 €

Publisher Description

Randall Sumpter questions the dominant notion that reporters entering the field in the late nineteenth century relied on an informal apprenticeship system to learn the rules of journalism. Drawing from the experiences of more than fifty reporters, he argues that cub reporters could and did access multiple sources of instruction, including autobiographies and memoirs of journalists, fiction, guidebooks, and trade magazines. Arguments for “professional journalism” did not resonate with the workaday journalists examined here. These news workers were more concerned with following a personal rather than a professional code of ethics, and implemented their own work rules. Some of those rules governed “delinquent” behavior. While scholars have traced some of the connections between beginning journalists and learning opportunities, Sumpter shows that much more can be discovered, with implications for understanding the development of journalistic professionalism and present-day instances of journalistic behavior.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2018
29 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
212
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Missouri Press
PROVIDER INFO
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
1.3
MB
Deadline Deadline
2025
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