The Weekly War The Weekly War

The Weekly War

How the Saturday Evening Post Reported World War I

    • $24.99
    • $24.99

Publisher Description

An elite team of reporters brought the Great War home each week to ten million readers of The Saturday Evening Post. As America’s largest circulation magazine, the Post hired the nation’s best-known and best-paid writers to cover World War I. The Weekly War provides a history of the unique record Post storytellers created of World War I, the distinct imprint the Post made on the field of war reporting, and the ways in which Americans witnessed their first world war. The Weekly War includes representative articles from across the span of the conflict, and Chris Dubbs and Carolyn Edy complement these works with essays about the history and significance of the magazine, the war, and the writers.  By the start of the Great War, The Saturday Evening Post had become the most successful and influential magazine in the United States, a source of entertainment, instruction, and news, as well as a shared experience. World War I served as a four-year experiment in how to report a modern war. The news-gathering strategies and news-controlling practices developed in this war were largely duplicated in World War II and later wars. Over the course of some thousand articles by some of the most prolific writers of the era, The Saturday Evening Post played an important role in the evolution of war reporting during World War I.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2023
May 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
288
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of North Texas Press
SELLER
UNT Press
SIZE
3.1
MB

More Books by Chris Dubbs

Smoking Food Smoking Food
2008
An Unladylike Profession An Unladylike Profession
2020
Animals in Space Animals in Space
2007
Realizing Tomorrow Realizing Tomorrow
2011
Realizing Tomorrow Realizing Tomorrow
2011
Smoking Food Smoking Food
2019