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Victor Pickard Democracy without Journalism? (Paperback)

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Book Title
Democracy without Journalism?
Publication Name
Democracy Without Journalism? : Confronting the Misinformation Society
Title
Democracy without Journalism?
Subtitle
Confronting the Misinformation Society
Author
Victor Pickard
Format
Trade Paperback
ISBN-10
0190946768
EAN
9780190946760
ISBN
9780190946760
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Genre
Law & Politics
Subject
General
Release Date
06/12/2019
Release Year
2019
Language
English
Country/Region of Manufacture
US
Item Height
0.7 in
Item Length
6.1 in
Item Width
9.1 in
Item Weight
13.6 Oz
Subject Area
Political Science
Publication Year
2019
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
264 Pages, 248 Pages

關於產品

Product Information

Victor Pickard shows that the modern journalism crisis is the culmination of long-term historical tensions and structural contradictions such as an over-reliance on advertising revenue, monopoly control over media infrastructures, and a lack of independent oversight. He looks to alternative media institutions that first evolved during the Progressive and New Deal Eras--as well as public media models around the world--to imagine a new kind of journalism.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0190946768
ISBN-13
9780190946760
eBay Product ID (ePID)
7038266623

Product Key Features

Author
Victor Pickard
Publication Name
Democracy Without Journalism? : Confronting the Misinformation Society
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Subject
General
Publication Year
2019
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Political Science
Number of Pages
264 Pages, 248 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
6.1 in
Item Height
0.7 in
Item Width
9.1 in
Item Weight
13.6 Oz

Additional Product Features

LCCN
2020-276803
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Lc Classification Number
Pn4867.2p53 2020
Reviews
"[T]his whip-smart book is a searing examination of how our broken media system is harming America. It not only lays out the deep problems but presents ways to begin fixing them." -- Margaret Sullivan, journalist and author of Newsroom Confidential: Lessons (and Worries) from an Ink-Stained Life "Democracy without Journalism offers a detailed takedown of the relationship between journalism and commercialism that is both remarkably convincing and refreshingly optimistic." -- Jacob L. Nelson, International Journal of Communication "Written before the pandemic hit, the book is all the more relevant in a world transformed by Covid-19. Among other things, it offers a critical examination of US media history, arguing that at crucial moments, a market-centered understanding of the media has undermined the public good that news outlets provide. Yet the book also offers us an important reminder that it is not too late to right this wrong by creating what Pickard calls 'a permanent public news media shielded from the market." -- Anya Schiffrin, The Nation "Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of the media, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona "Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job of explaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all our interests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign "This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle "Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University, "Democracy without Journalism offers a detailed takedown of the relationship between journalism and commercialism that is both remarkably convincing and refreshingly optimistic." -- Jacob L. Nelson, International Journal of Communication "Written before the pandemic hit, the book is all the more relevant in a world transformed by Covid-19. Among other things, it offers a critical examination of US media history, arguing that at crucial moments, a market-centered understanding of the media has undermined the public good that news outlets provide. Yet the book also offers us an important reminder that it is not too late to right this wrong by creating what Pickard calls 'a permanent public news media shielded from the market." -- Anya Schiffrin, The Nation "Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of the media, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona "Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job of explaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all our interests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign "This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle "Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University, "Written before the pandemic hit, the book is all the more relevant in a world transformed by Covid-19. Among other things, it offers a critical examination of US media history, arguing that at crucial moments, a market-centered understanding of the media has undermined the public good that news outlets provide. Yet the book also offers us an important reminder that it is not too late to right this wrong by creating what Pickard calls 'a permanent public news media shielded from the market." -- Anya Schiffrin, The Nation "Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of the media, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona "Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job of explaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all our interests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign "This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle "Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University, "[T]his whip-smart book is a searing examination of how our broken media system is harming America. It not only lays out the deep problems but presents ways to begin fixing them." -- Margaret Sullivan, journalist and author of Newsroom Confidential: Lessons (and Worries) from an Ink-Stained Life"Democracy without Journalism offers a detailed takedown of the relationship between journalism and commercialism that is both remarkably convincing and refreshingly optimistic." -- Jacob L. Nelson, International Journal of Communication"Written before the pandemic hit, the book is all the more relevant in a world transformed by Covid-19. Among other things, it offers a critical examination of US media history, arguing that at crucial moments, a market-centered understanding of the media has undermined the public good that news outlets provide. Yet the book also offers us an important reminder that it is not too late to right this wrong by creating what Pickard calls 'a permanent public news media shielded from the market." -- Anya Schiffrin, The Nation"Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of the media, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona "Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job of explaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all our interests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign "This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle "Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University, "Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of the media, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona "Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job of explaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all our interests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign "This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle "Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University, "[T]his whip-smart book is a searing examination of how our broken media system is harming America. It not only lays out the deep problems but presents ways to begin fixing them." -- Margaret Sullivan, journalist and author of Newsroom Confidential: Lessons (and Worries) from an Ink-Stained Life"Democracy without Journalism offers a detailed takedown of the relationship between journalism and commercialism that is both remarkably convincing and refreshingly optimistic." -- Jacob L. Nelson, International Journal of Communication"Written before the pandemic hit, the book is all the more relevant in a world transformed by Covid-19. Among other things, it offers a critical examination of US media history, arguing that at crucial moments, a market-centered understanding of the media has undermined the public good that news outlets provide. Yet the book also offers us an important reminder that it is not too late to right this wrong by creating what Pickard calls 'a permanent public newsmedia shielded from the market." -- Anya Schiffrin, The Nation"Pickard presents a sharp critique and historical review of the 'discursive capture' of policy discussions by market fundamentalism in the US, which bars as beyond discussion even the commitment of the Founders to an active government role in ensuring that the general public will be informed by a lively, vibrant, diverse media system. An eloquent and carefully reasoned call for revival of what has been lost to overcome the severe structural crisis of themedia, with its deleterious impact on functioning democracy. A very important book."-Noam Chomsky, MIT and University of Arizona"Few topics deserve and receive more attention today than the collapse of democratic practices and institutions, as well as the propaganda barrage emanating from social media and the Internet. Conspicuously absent is arguably the single most important factor: the freefall collapse and disintegration of the commercial news media system such that journalism barely exists in the United States compared to a generation ago. Victor Pickard has done a masterful job ofexplaining the crisis in his highly original Democracy without Journalism? and has provided an evidence-based roadmap to the range of solutions necessary to make democracy functional. It is in all ourinterests that this brilliant book be widely read."-Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign"This is the best discussion of the crisis of American journalism I have read. Not only does Pickard show how the precarious commercial situation of the press contributes to the fragile state of contemporary democracy, but he charts a path toward more reliable public information and stronger democratic institutions."-W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington, Seattle"Part journalism history, part policy analysis, and part meditation on the future of the media, Democracy without Journalism? is a stellar book. Pickard expertly describes how markets and public policies have both failed journalism, and offers concrete suggestions for a way forward to support public media in the US."-James T. Hamilton, Stanford University
Table of Content
Introduction: When Commercialism Trumps Democracy Chapter 1: Historical Roots of US Press Freedoms and Failures Chapter 2: The Early Crisis and Missed Opportunities Chapter 3: How Commercialism Degrades Journalism and Hurts Democracy Chapter 4: Monopoly Control over Digital Infrastructures Chapter 5: American Media Exceptionalism and the Public Option Conclusion: The Media We Need Notes Index
Dewey Decimal
071.3
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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