The Public Journalism Movement in America: Evangelists in the Newsroom
By (Author) Don H. Corrigan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th July 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Media studies: journalism
302.23
Hardback
256
The philosophy of public journalism, which has found converts in academia and in newsrooms nationwide, holds that traditional journalism is outmodedvalues such as objectivity and detachment must give way to new values connecting journalists to their communities and committing them to a kind of reporting that will make public life go well. These new values, however, are not clearly defined, and even the main advocates of public journalism disagree on its meaning and purpose. This volume offers a thorough and devastating critique of public journalism by showing that its advocates have failed to diagnose what really ails American journalism and that their prescriptions for saving journalism are more likely to harm than to help the profession. After presenting the ideas and projects that characterize the major players in the movement, the author introduces the data from an extensive survey of newspaper editors and academics, as well as a comprehensive lexicon of public journalism.
DON H. CORRIGAN is Professor of Journalism at Webster University in St. Louis and Editor-in-Chief of two weekly newspapers, Webster-Kirkwood Times and South County Times. He has reported from Washington D.C., as a writer for investigative columnist Jack Anderson and he has reported for his newspaper group from Russia, Bosnia, Northern Ireland, and other countries. Corrigan has won numerous reporting awards from the Missouri Press Association and the Independent Free Papers of America, has published op-ed pieces in U.S. dailies from coast to coast, and has served on the editorial board of St. Louis Journalism Review for almost two decades.