Loading profile…
Loading profile…
Book
2010
A comprehensive reference work covering multiple journalism genres and practices, from traditional forms like yellow journalism and muckraking to contemporary digital and citizen journalism. Compiled from Wikipedia content with encyclopedic coverage of journalistic styles, ethics, and approaches.
Sequence ladder
Narrative Intelligence sources live outside the figurative image sequence ladder. Adaptive placement applies to image sequences, not this reading library.
What this book knows
Journalism's genres—from muckraking to gonzo to documentary—are distinct professional crafts, each with its own ethics, form, and social function.
work-as-meaning
Attempting to situate newspapers and journalists as active participants in community life, rather than as detached spectators.
JGDF-RC-026Gonzo journalism is a style of journalism written subjectively, often including the reporter as part of the story via a first person narrative.
JGDF-RC-063What is needed is serious critical attention of all kinds to this work: a discourse grounded in fact but artful in execution that might be called literary nonfiction.
JGDF-RC-033obedience-and-authority
Origin of the term 'muckraker' is attributed to President Theodore Roosevelt, who during a speech delivered on April 14, 1906, drew on...
JGDF-RC-079Rachael Carson confronted the chemical industry and helped to spur legislation for regulation and control of DDT and other industrially used substances.
JGDF-RC-081ambition-and-status
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein breakthrough journalists for The Washington Post on the Watergate scandal; authors of All the President's Men.
JGDF-RC-084Illuminates
6 published passages · book excerpt · research analysis
Reader resonance signals for text sources are not wired to this view yet.