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|z 9780815624615
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|a 9780815624615
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|a 9780815627111
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|z 0815624611
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|a 0815627114
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|a PN4874.B4
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|a Crouthamel, James L.
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|a Bennett's New York herald and the rise of the popular press
|h Elektronische Ressource
|c James L. Crouthamel
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|a First edition
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|a Syracuse, N.Y.
|b Syracuse University Press
|c 1989©1989, 1989
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|a xi, 202 pages
|b illustrations
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|a Learning journalism -- Sensationalism and the newspaper revolution -- Technology and the news -- Editorial jingoism -- National issues -- Monitor of New York -- Covering the Civil War -- War and postwar politics -- Bennett in retrospect
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|a Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-194) and index
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|a Bennett, James Gordon / 1795-1872
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|a Bennett, James Gordon / 1795-1872
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|a New York Herald Tribune
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|a HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
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|a New York herald
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|a eng
|2 ISO 639-2
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|b ZDB-39-JOA
|a JSTOR Open Access Books
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|a New York State studies
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|a Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002
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|z 1684450047
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|z 9781684450046
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|u https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv64h7cg
|x Verlag
|3 Volltext
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|a 071/.471
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|a With the founding of the New York Herald in 1835, James Gordon Bennett began what was to become the most successful and widely circulated newspaper of mid-nineteenth-century America. He did not invent the cheap popular newspaper, but his innovations, a combination of sensationalism, technological improvements, and comprehensive news coverage, made the Herald the prototype of modern journalism and the best newspaper of its time. Subsequent yellow journalists like Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearts merely carried Bennett's techniques to new heights--or depths. Bennett championed the masses and created a newspaper for them. Priced cheap enough for most New Yorkers to afford, the Herald served up information that was useful, educational, and entertaining. Articles covered the whole range of human activity--sex, crime, tragedy, medicine, religion, culture. This book is not a biography of Bennett but rather an account of him as editor and publisher. His editorials were notorious for their rhetorical extremism, and his public identity was based on negatives--Anglophobia, anti-Catholicism, and anti-abolitionism in particular. He misled his unsophisticated readers with simplistic explanations of events and forces that affected their lives. He claimed to be politically independent, above party, but he was constantly enmeshed in the party battles of the period. His contemporaries envied his success bit detested the means by which he achieved it; they respected his power but hated him personally. Former accounts of Bennett have been anecdotal and superficial. James. L. Crouthamel has based his research primarily on a day-by-day reading of over three decades of the Herald and thus provides useful facts and assessments of a major period in the history of journalism
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