Where the Truth Lies

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

8/27/2018 Where the Truth Lies Volume 28 Numbers 1 & 2, 2018 Where the Truth Lies: Grappling with Falsehood and Objectivit y in the Trump Era Susan Keith Rutgers University New Brunswick, NJ, USA Leslie­Jean Thornton Arizona State University Phoenix, AZ, USA Abstract: In both the 2016 presidential campaign and the first eighteen months of the Trump Administration, U.S. journalists encountered a new iteration of an important and thorny issue of ethics and practice­based norms: How should they describe assertions from Donald J. Trump that appeared to run demonstrably counter to truth? In other words, should journalists call the president a liar? As Trump asserted, ignoring vote counts, that he had won a landslide victory and maintained, without citing evidence, that there had been widespread voter fraud, U.S. journalism found itself in the relatively rare position of knowing the truth but not always knowing what to do with it. This essay identifies four types of approaches news outlets used in response to this and other presidential statements that could be immediately shown to be counter­factual. Three approaches were found in news reports: “stenographic objectivity,” in which journalists simply reported what Trump asserted, with little further explanation; what we call “comparative objectivity,” in which Trump’s assertions were reported in conjunction with information challenging them; and what we call “interrogative objectivity,” in which journalists overtly questioned the truth of the assertions, making that questioning the point of the article. A fourth type of response, which we call “evaluative subjectivity,” appeared in opinion sections, but emphasized reporting techniques to cast the counter­factual statements as lies. During both the 2016 presidential campaign and the first eighteen months of the Trump Administration, U.S. journalists encountered an important and thorny issue of ethics and practice­based norms: How should they describe assertions from candidate/President Elect/President Donald J. Trump that appeared to run demonstrably counter to truth? As Trump asserted he had won a landslide election victory (Seipel, 2016), maintained there was widespread voter fraud (CNBC.com staff, 2016), asserted that the United States was the highest­taxed nation in the world (Drum, 2017), and made other unsupportable claims, U.S. journalism found itself in the relatively rare position of knowing the truth but not always knowing what to do with it. This essay argues that U.S. journalism utilized four types of responses: “stenographic objectivity,” in which news outlets simply repeated what Trump asserted, with little further explanation; “comparative objectivity,” in which journalists repeated Trump’s assertions in conjunction with information challenging them; “interrogative objectivity,” in which journalists overtly questioned the truth of the assertions, making the counterfactual nature of the statements the point of the report; and evaluative subjectivity, in which editorial writers and opinion sections labeled the statements “lies.” Those sections, traditionally the home of subjective work http://www.cios.org/www/ejc/sandbox/Keith%20and%20Thornton.html 1/14 8/27/2018 Where the Truth Lies for which reporting was not the dominant point, relied heavily on reporting techniques to be able to contextualize the statements as connected incidents, sometimes recurring or accumulating but always meaningful. The essay begins with a discussion of objectivity in U.S. journalism. Then it recounts examples of other moments in American history when journalism was faced with a choice about labeling a president or other political figure’s counterfactual words. Next, the essay lays out the central argument: that responses to Trump’s statements reveal various conceptions and degrees of objectivity and subjectivity at work in U.S. journalism. Finally, the essay makes suggestions for future research. This work is important because it sheds light on the range of U.S. journalism practices in what an increasing number of scholars and journalists have referred to—some admiringly and some with dismay—as a post­objectivity era (Barlow, 2012; Gabler, 2013; McNair, 2017; Mort, 2012/3; St. John & Johnson, 2012; Wallace, 2017; Warhover, 2017). It may be premature to suggest there has been so seismic a shift in journalists’ views about balance in reporting and writing that objectivity is firmly in the past. Both research and anecdotal reports have identified news media workers who are not prepared to abandon 20th­century professional norms (Been, 2018; Ruhs, 2016). However, enough questions have been raised by journalists and scholars since 2016 about the role of objectivity in U.S. news production (e.g., Craft, 2017; Wallace, 2017; Rutenberg, 2016)—Singer (2017) writes that newspapers now “explicitly label lies for what they are,” leaving “no doubt as to what conclusions should be drawn” (2017, pp. 320­21)—that it seems appropriate to examine the range of ways in which U.S. journalists have reacted to obviously counterfactual presidential claims. An established range, in turn, can facilitate observation (and tracking) of stability and change. Contextualizing Objectivity Scholars have long noted that a key difference between journalism in the United States and many other nations, including most European nations, is that U.S. journalism is more likely to enshrine objectivity—the norm of “reporting something called ‘news’ without commenting on it, slanting it, or shaping its formulation in any way” (Schudson, 2001, p. 150)—as either an attainable goal or a rarely met ideal of professional practice (Waisbord, 2009; Ward, 2006). But it wasn’t always so. Before the 20th century, partisan media were the norm in the United States. As Schudson (2001) writes: “As late as the l890s, when a standard Republican paper covered a presidential election, it not only deplored and derided Democratic candidates in editorials but often just neglected to mention them in the news. … And in the Democratic papers, of course, it was just the reverse” (p. 155). Connery (2011) notes a shift in journalism toward “realism” in the 19th century, and Ward (2006) cites the appearance of the word “objectivity” in a book about newswriting in 1911. However, the concept was not common in codes of ethics, proceedings of meetings of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, or early journalism textbooks before the 1920s (Streckfuss, 1990). Schudson (1978, 2001) and other scholars (Emery, Emery, & Roberts, 1997; Ward, 2006) attribute the rise of objectivity to a variety of factors, including a decline in the power of political parties, to which newspapers had been beholden; a reaction to excesses of press agentry; the invention of the telegraph, which encouraged inverted­pyramid style articles focused on facts; and a commercial impulse to sell to readers of all political persuasions. Also important was the influence of scientific naturalism, the idea that fact­ based investigations provided the best explanation for phenomena. Walter Lippmann (1919), a key popularizer of objectivity, wrote that “only the discipline of a modernized logic can open the door to reality” and called for reporters to use “a sense of evidence” (p. 783), focusing on objectivity not as an attribute of the journalist, but as a method that would produce good journalism. This connection to evidence­based practice has been largely lost, write Kovach and Rosenstiel (2007), with the result that “objectivity” now “is usually used to describe the very problem it was conceived to correct” (p. 6), the reporting of claims without significant investigation of their truth. In addition, Maras (2013) has noted, “objectivity” has become a multifaceted word, “articulated in a cluster of terms such as impartiality, neutrality, accuracy, fairness, honesty, commitment to the truth, depersonalization and balance” (p. 9). That Maras uses the term “commitment to truth,” rather than “truth,” is notable, as a devotion to objectivity can lead, Muñoz­Torres (2012) writes, to “a substantial confusion of objectivity with truth and of subjectivity with the lack of it” (p. 574). Political Deceit and the Media Perhaps the most famous U.S. example of this confusion comes from the Cold War era of the 1950s when some journalists uncritically published the charges of Republican U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin that various Americans were communists or communist sympathizers. Although news media outlets did not react uniformly to McCarthy’s assertions, some, especially the wire services, reported them without challenging their truthfulness (Bayley, 1981). Former International News Service reporter Charles Seib, who became the ombudsman for The Washington Post, told Bayley that McCarthy manipulated the work routines of wire­ service journalists, offering new assertions at times when editors were pressing for fresh rewrites for later news cycles: “We were trapped by our techniques. If he said it, we wrote it; the pressures were to deliver” (in Bayley, 1981). http://www.cios.org/www/ejc/sandbox/Keith%20and%20Thornton.html 2/14 8/27/2018 Where the Truth Lies In that case, the publication of news that was accurate (in that it quoted McCarthy’s assertions without errors about what he had said) but not truthful (because what he said lacked any basis in reality) was promoted by news routines. These are the “rules— mostly unwritten—that give the media worker guidance” on such questions as “What can or should be done? What will lead to criticism?” (Shoemaker
Recommended publications
  • Oral History Interview – 2/10/2003 Administrative Information

    Oral History Interview – 2/10/2003 Administrative Information

    Sid Davis Oral History Interview – 2/10/2003 Administrative Information Creator: Sid Davis Interviewer: Vicki Daitch Date of Interview: February 10, 2003 Place of Interview: Washington D.C. Length: 76 pages Biographical Note Davis was a journalist, a White House correspondent (1959-1968) and Washington News Bureau chief (1968-1977) for the Westinghouse Broadcasting; director (1977-1979), bureau chief (1979-1980), and vice president and bureau chief (1980-1982) for NBC News; and a senior Washington correspondent (1982-1987) and director of office programs for the Voice of America (1987-1994). In this interview, he discusses the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy’s assassination and Lyndon B. Johnson’s swearing in, and the press coverage of the White House, among other issues. Access Open. Usage Restrictions According to the deed of gift signed on April 5, 2004, copyright of these materials has been assigned to the United States Government. Users of these materials are advised to determine the copyright status of any document from which they wish to publish. Copyright The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excesses of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement.
  • Notes and Sources for Evil Geniuses: the Unmaking of America: a Recent History

    Notes and Sources for Evil Geniuses: the Unmaking of America: a Recent History

    Notes and Sources for Evil Geniuses: The Unmaking of America: A Recent History Introduction xiv “If infectious greed is the virus” Kurt Andersen, “City of Schemes,” The New York Times, Oct. 6, 2002. xvi “run of pedal-to-the-medal hypercapitalism” Kurt Andersen, “American Roulette,” New York, December 22, 2006. xx “People of the same trade” Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, ed. Andrew Skinner, 1776 (London: Penguin, 1999) Book I, Chapter X. Chapter 1 4 “The discovery of America offered” Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy In America, trans. Arthur Goldhammer (New York: Library of America, 2012), Book One, Introductory Chapter. 4 “A new science of politics” Tocqueville, Democracy In America, Book One, Introductory Chapter. 4 “The inhabitants of the United States” Tocqueville, Democracy In America, Book One, Chapter XVIII. 5 “there was virtually no economic growth” Robert J Gordon. “Is US economic growth over? Faltering innovation confronts the six headwinds.” Policy Insight No. 63. Centre for Economic Policy Research, September, 2012. --Thomas Piketty, “World Growth from the Antiquity (growth rate per period),” Quandl. 6 each citizen’s share of the economy Richard H. Steckel, “A History of the Standard of Living in the United States,” in EH.net (Economic History Association, 2020). --Andrew McAfee and Erik Brynjolfsson, The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies (New York: W.W. Norton, 2016), p. 98. 6 “Constant revolutionizing of production” Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx, Manifesto of the Communist Party (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1969), Chapter I. 7 from the early 1840s to 1860 Tomas Nonnenmacher, “History of the U.S.
  • Terror/Torture Karima Bennoune

    Terror/Torture Karima Bennoune

    Berkeley Journal of International Law Volume 26 | Issue 1 Article 1 2008 Terror/Torture Karima Bennoune Recommended Citation Karima Bennoune, Terror/Torture, 26 Berkeley J. Int'l Law. 1 (2008). Available at: http://scholarship.law.berkeley.edu/bjil/vol26/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals and Related Materials at Berkeley Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Berkeley Journal of International Law by an authorized administrator of Berkeley Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Bennoune: Terror/Torture Terror/Torture By Karima Bennoune* ABSTRACT In the face of terrorism, human rights law's requirement that states "respect and ensure" rights necessitates that states take active steps to safeguard their populations from violent attack, but in so doing do not violate rights. Security experts usually emphasize the aspect of ensuring rights while human rights ad- vocates largely focus on respecting rights. The trick, which neither side in the debate has adequately referenced, is that states have to do both at the same time. In contrast to these largely one-sided approaches, adopting a radical universalist stance, this Article argues that both contemporary human rights and security dis- courses on terrorism must be broadened and renewed. This renewal must be in- formed by the understanding that international human rights law protects the in- dividual both from terrorism and the excesses of counter-terrorism, like torture. To develop this thesis, the Article explores the philosophical overlap between both terrorism and torture and their normative prohibitions.
  • 2015 New York Journalism Hall of Fame

    2015 New York Journalism Hall of Fame

    THE DEADLINE CLUB New York City Chapter, Society of Professional 2015 Journalists NEW YORK JOURNALISM HALL OF FAME SARDI’S RESTAURANT, 234 WEST 44TH ST., MANHATTAN Thursday, Nov. 19, 2015 11:30 a.m. reception Noon luncheon 1 p.m. ceremony PROGRAM WELCOME J. Alex Tarquinio MENU Deadline Club Chairwoman REMARKS APPETIZER Peter Szekely Deadline Club President Sweet Corn Soup with Crab and Avocado Paul Fletcher ENTREE Society of Professional Journalists President Sauteed Black Angus Sirloin Steak with Parmesan Whipped Potatoes, Betsy Ashton Porcini Parsley Custard and Classic Bordelaise Sauce, Deadline Club Past President Seasonal Vegetables THE HONOREES MAX FRANKEL DESSERT The New York Times Molten Chocolate Cake JUAN GONZÁLEZ with Pistachio Ice Cream The New York Daily News CHARLIE ROSE CBS and PBS LESLEY STAHL CBS’s “60 Minutes” PAUL E. STEIGER ProPublica and The Wall Street Journal RICHARD B. STOLLEY Time Inc. FOLLOW THE CONVERSATION ON TWITTER WITH THE HASHTAG #deadlineclub. PROGRAM WELCOME J. Alex Tarquinio MENU Deadline Club Chairwoman REMARKS APPETIZER Peter Szekely Deadline Club President Sweet Corn Soup with Crab and Avocado Paul Fletcher ENTREE Society of Professional Journalists President Sauteed Black Angus Sirloin Steak with Parmesan Whipped Potatoes, Betsy Ashton Porcini Parsley Custard and Classic Bordelaise Sauce, Deadline Club Past President Seasonal Vegetables THE HONOREES MAX FRANKEL DESSERT The New York Times Molten Chocolate Cake JUAN GONZÁLEZ with Pistachio Ice Cream The New York Daily News CHARLIE ROSE CBS and PBS LESLEY STAHL CBS’s “60 Minutes” PAUL E. STEIGER ProPublica and The Wall Street Journal RICHARD B. STOLLEY Time Inc. FOLLOW THE CONVERSATION ON TWITTER WITH THE HASHTAG #deadlineclub.
  • For Their Eyes Only

    For Their Eyes Only

    FOR THEIR EYES ONLY How Presidential Appointees Treat Public Documents as Personal Property Steve Weinberg THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY FOR THEIR EYES ONLY How Presidential Appointees Treat Public Documents as Personal Property Steve Weinberg THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY The Center for Public Integrity is an independent, nonprofit organization that examines public service and ethics-related issues. The Center's REPORTS combine the substantive study of government with in-depth journalism. The Center is funded by foundations, corporations, labor unions, individuals, and revenue from news organizations. This Center study and the views expressed herein are those of the author. What is written here does not necessarily reflect the views of individual members of The Center for Public Integrity's Board of Directors or Advisory Board. Copyright (c) 1992 THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without the written permission of The Center for Public Integrity. ISBN 0-962-90127-X "Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people, who have a right and a desire to know. But, besides this, they have a right, an indisputable, unalienable, indefeasible, divine right to that most dreaded and envied kind of knowledge - I mean of the characters and conduct of their rulers." John Adams (1735-1826), second president of the United States Steve Weinberg is a freelance investigative journalist in Columbia, Mo. From 1983-1990, he served as executive director of Investigative Reporters & Editors, an international organization with about 3000 members.
  • J353F (07780)/ J395 (07920) HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES in JOURNALISM University of Texas School of Journalism Fall 2013

    J353F (07780)/ J395 (07920) HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES in JOURNALISM University of Texas School of Journalism Fall 2013

    Historical Perspectives in journalism 1 J353F (07780)/ J395 (07920) HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES IN JOURNALISM University of Texas School of Journalism Fall 2013 Instructor: Dr. Tom Johnson Office: Belo 3.328 Phone: 232-3831 email: [email protected] Office Hours: 11-12 MW 12W, by appointment and when you least expect it Class Time:10-11 MWF, CMA 6.170 REQUIRED READINGS Wm David Sloan, The Media in America: A History (8th Edition). Reading packet: available on Blackboard. COURSE DESCRIPTION Development of the mass media; social, economic, and political factors that have contributed to changes in the press. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing and a major in journalism, or consent of instructor. OBJECTIVES J353F will trace the development of American media with an emphasis on cultural, technological and economic backgrounds of press development. To put it more simply, this course will examine the historic relationship between American society and the media. An underlying assumption of this class is that the content and values of the media have been greatly influenced by changes in society over the last 300 years. Conversely, the media have helped shape our society. More specifically, this course will: 1. Examine how journalistic values such as objectivity have evolved. 2. Explain how the media influenced society and how society influenced the media during different periods of our nation's history. Historical Perspectives in journalism 2 3. Examine who controlled the media at different periods of time, how that control was exercised and how that control influenced media content. 4. Investigate the relationship between the public and the media during different periods of time.
  • Penelope Abernathy Joaquin Alvarado

    Penelope Abernathy Joaquin Alvarado

    How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age? bios Penelope Abernathy Joaquin Alvarado Penelope Abernathy is Knight Chair in Journalism Joaquin Alvarado is Senior Vice President, Digital and Digital Media Economics at the University Innovation at American Public Media. Alvarado of North Carolina School of Journalism and leads strategic development of APM’s Public Mass Communication. Abernathy, a journalism Insight initiatives, as well as developing models for professional with more than 30 years experience deepening audience engagement, widening digital as a reporter, editor and media executive, became reach and increasing digital revenue growth across all the Knight Chair in Journalism and Digital Media operating divisions. Economics at the school July 1, 2008. Abernathy, a Laurinburg, N.C., native and former executive Alvarado comes to APM/MPR from the Corporation at the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, for Public Broadcasting, where he led successful specializes in preserving quality journalism by initiatives in broadening the reach and diversity helping the news business succeed economically in within public media as Senior Vice President for the digital media environment. Before joining the Diversity and Innovation. Prior to joining the school, she was vice president and executive director CPB, Alvarado spearheaded many key projects and of industry programs at the Paley Center for Media companies furthering new frameworks for public in New York City. As an executive, Abernathy media, education and community leadership in the launched new enterprises and helped increase Internet age. In 2008, he initiated CoCo Studios, revenue at some of the nation’s most prominent news promoting media collaboration and information organizations and publishing companies, including sharing for fiber and mobile networks.
  • F:\Nixon -- Move to Former Staff on 9.2\Declarations

    F:\Nixon -- Move to Former Staff on 9.2\Declarations

    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IN RE PETITION OF STANLEY KUTLER, ) AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION, ) AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR LEGAL HISTORY, ) Miscellaneous Action No. ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN HISTORIANS, ) and SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ARCHIVISTS. ) ___________________________________________) DECLARATIONS IN SUPPORT OF PETITION FOR ORDER DIRECTING RELEASE OF TRANSCRIPT OF RICHARD M. NIXON’S GRAND JURY TESTIMONY OF JUNE 23-24, 1975, AND ASSOCIATED MATERIALS OF THE WATERGATE SPECIAL PROSECUTION FORCE Allison M. Zieve (D.C. Bar No. 424786) Michael T. Kirkpatrick (D.C. Bar No. 486293 Public Citizen Litigation Group 1600 20th Street NW Washington, DC 20009 (202) 588-1000 Counsel for Petitioners TABLE OF CONTENTS Tab Declaration of Stanley Kutler.................................................... A Declaration of Julian Helisek (including exhibits) ................................... B Declaration of Richard J. Davis .................................................. C Declaration of John W. Dean III ................................................. D Declaration of David M. Dorsen ................................................. E Declaration of Mark Feldstein ................................................... F Declaration of Don Fulsom ..................................................... G Declaration of David Greenberg ................................................. H Declaration of Kenneth J. Hughes, Jr. .............................................. I Declaration of Thomas Long ....................................................
  • Pulitzer Prize Winners and Finalists

    Pulitzer Prize Winners and Finalists

    WINNERS AND FINALISTS 1917 TO PRESENT TABLE OF CONTENTS Excerpts from the Plan of Award ..............................................................2 PULITZER PRIZES IN JOURNALISM Public Service ...........................................................................................6 Reporting ...............................................................................................24 Local Reporting .....................................................................................27 Local Reporting, Edition Time ..............................................................32 Local General or Spot News Reporting ..................................................33 General News Reporting ........................................................................36 Spot News Reporting ............................................................................38 Breaking News Reporting .....................................................................39 Local Reporting, No Edition Time .......................................................45 Local Investigative or Specialized Reporting .........................................47 Investigative Reporting ..........................................................................50 Explanatory Journalism .........................................................................61 Explanatory Reporting ...........................................................................64 Specialized Reporting .............................................................................70
  • Anthony Lewis Papers [Finding Aid]. Library of Congress. [PDF Rendered

    Anthony Lewis Papers [Finding Aid]. Library of Congress. [PDF Rendered

    Anthony Lewis Papers A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division, Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 2017 Revised 2017 October Contact information: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mss.contact Additional search options available at: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms013127 LC Online Catalog record: http://lccn.loc.gov/mm81075856 Prepared by Margaret McAleer Revised and expanded by Connie L. Cartledge with the assistance of Chad Conrady, Pang Xiong, Jeffery Bryson, Rosa Hernandez, Sherralyn McCoy, and Tammi Taylor Collection Summary Title: Anthony Lewis Papers Span Dates: 1941-2007 Bulk Dates: (bulk 1963-2001) ID No.: MSS75856 Creator: Lewis, Anthony, 1927-2013 Extent: 347,000 items ; 998 containers plus 1 classified ; 399.0 linear feet Language: Collection material in English Location: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Summary: Newspaper columnist and author. Correspondence, memoranda, book drafts, research files for books, notebooks and notes, articles and columns by Lewis, reports, speeches, newsletters, photographs, press releases, newspaper clippings, printed matter, and other material documenting primarily Lewis’s professional activities. Selected Search Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically therein. People Baker, Russell, 1925- --Correspondence. Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993. Bush, George W. (George Walker), 1946- Carter, Jimmy, 1924- Clinton, Bill, 1946- Fortas, Abe--Correspondence. Frankfurter, Felix, 1882-1965--Correspondence. Freud, Anna, 1895-1982--Correspondence. George-Brown, George Alfred Brown, Baron, 1914-1985.
  • The Death of Centrality the Role of the Editorial Page Hodding Carter

    The Death of Centrality the Role of the Editorial Page Hodding Carter

    • Ieman orts December 1970 The Death of Centrality By Grady Clay The Role of the Editorial Page By Louis M. Lyons Hodding Carter: A Profile in Courage By Jay Milner The Quest for Objectivity By Eric Sevareid 2 NiemanR~ports VOL. XXIV, No.4 Louis M. Lyons, Editor Emeritus December 1970 -Dwight E. Sargent, Editor- -Tenney K. Lehman, Managing Editor- Editorial Board of the Society of Nieman Fellows Sylvan Meyer Roy M. Fisher Ray Jenkins Robert W. Brown Miami News Chicago Daily News Alabama Journal Augusta Chronicle Robert Lasch Robert B. Frazier John Strohmeyer Millard C. Browne St. Louis Post-Dispatch Eugene Register-Guard Bethlehem Globe-Times Buffalo News Robert Giles Thomas H. Griffith E. J. Paxton, Jr. William B. Dickinson Knight Newspapers Life Magazine Paducah Sun-Democrat Philadelphia Bulletin Smith Hempstone, Jr. Rebecca Gross Harry T. Montgomery Tillman Durdin Washington Star Lock Haven Express Associated Press New York Times George Chaplin Alan Barth David Kraslow William F. Mcilwain Honolulu Advertiser Washington Post Los Angeles Times Wake Forest University Published quarterly by the Society of Nieman Fellows from 48 Trowbridge Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138. Subscription $3 a year. Second-class postage paid at Boston, Mass. The Role of the Editorial Page By Louis M. Lyons In so old a city as this you would expect to be confronted mained as scarce as women copy editors, and the one scarcity with relics and antiques. In an absent-minded moment I let is as unaccountable as the other. But that's your funeral. As a myself be jnduced to illustrate this aspect of our fair city.
  • Mamie Eisenhower As First Lady: Media Coverage of a Silent Partner

    Mamie Eisenhower As First Lady: Media Coverage of a Silent Partner

    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 246 443 CS 208 461 AUTHOR Beasley, Maurine H. TITLE Mamie Eisenhower as First Lady: Media Coverage of a Silent Partner. PUB DATE Aug 84 NOTE 27p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (67th, Gainesville, FL, August 5-8, 1984). PUB TYPE Speeches/Conference Papers (150) -- Reports - Research/Technical (143) -- Viewpoints (120) EDRS PRICE MF01 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS *Females;,Information Sources; Journalism; *Mass Media; Newspapers; *News Reporting; Press Opinion; *Sex Stereotypes; Social History IDENTIFIERS *Eisenhower (Mamie); *Media Role ABSTRACT Coverage of Mamie Eisenhower as First Lady illustrates difficulties that the media have in projecting images of women. Like many women in the news, she•was noteworthy because of her satellite status in relation to a man. Exercising some control over her public portrayal--if only to refuse to see the press to the extent it desired--she deliberately chose to present herself within the framework of sex-role stereotyping instead of presenting herself as a flesh-and-blood human being. The degree to which the press joined with her to present her in stereotypical terms raises the question of whether it was held captive by its own assumptions concerning the role of women. (Author/CRH) Mamie Eisenhower as First Lady: Media Coverage of a Silent Partner By Maurine H. Beasley Associate Professor College of Journalism University of Maryland Submitted to the Committee on the Status of Women in Journalism and,Mass Communication for the 1984 AEJMC convention Abstract Mamie Eisenhower as First Lady: Media.Coverage' of a Silent Partner Coverage of Mamie £isenhtwer as First Lady illustrates difficulties which the media has in projecting images of women.