Getting It Wrong Getting It Wrong

Getting It Wrong

Debunking the Greatest Myths in American Journalism

    • USD 20.99
    • USD 20.99

Descripción editorial

Many of American journalism’s best-known and most cherished stories are exaggerated, dubious, or apocryphal. They are media-driven myths, and they attribute to the news media and their practitioners far more power and influence than they truly exert. In Getting It Wrong, writer and scholar W. Joseph Campbell confronts and dismantles prominent media-driven myths, describing how they can feed stereotypes, distort understanding about the news media, and deflect blame from policymakers. Campbell debunks the notions that the Washington Post’s Watergate reporting brought down Richard M. Nixon’s corrupt presidency, that Walter Cronkite’s characterization of the Vietnam War in 1968 shifted public opinion against the conflict, and that William Randolph Hearst vowed to “furnish the war” against Spain in 1898. This expanded second edition includes a new preface and new chapters about the first Kennedy-Nixon debate in 1960, the haunting Napalm Girl photograph of the Vietnam War, and bogus quotations driven by the Internet and social media.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2016
18 de octubre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
368
Páginas
EDITORIAL
University of California Press
VENDEDOR
University of California Press
TAMAÑO
10.7
MB

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