Tell Me No Lies: Investigative Journalism and its Triumphs

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Random House, 15 feb 2011 - 672 páginas

Tell Me No Lies is a celebration of the very best investigative journalism, and includes writing by some of the greatest practitioners of the craft: Seymour Hersh on the My Lai massacre; Paul Foot on the Lockerbie cover-up; Wilfred Burchett, the first Westerner to enter Hiroshima following the atomic bombing; Israeli journalist Amira Hass, reporting from the Gaza Strip in the 1990s; Gunter Wallraff, the great German undercover reporter; Jessica Mitford on 'The American Way of Death'; Martha Gelhorn on the liberation of the death camp at Dachau.

The book - a selection of articles, broadcasts and books extracts that revealed important and disturbing truths - ranges from across many of the critical events, scandals and struggles of the past fifty years. Along the way it bears witness to epic injustices committed against the peoples of Vietnam, Cambodia, East Timor and Palestine.

John Pilger sets each piece of reporting in its context and introduces the collection with a passionate essay arguing that the kind of journalism he celebrates here is being subverted by the very forces that ought to be its enemy. Taken as a whole, the book tells an extraordinary 'secret history' of the modern era. It is also a call to arms to journalists everywhere - before it is too late.

 

Páginas seleccionadas

Índice

Martha Gellhorn
1
Edward R Murrow
26
Jessica Mitford
45
James Cameron
70
Hersh
85
John Pilger
120
Günter Wallraff
158
Brian Toohey and Marian Wilkinson
174
Phillip Knightley
357
Eduardo Galeano
386
Anna Politkovskaya
409
Linda Melvern
433
Greg Palast
465
Eric Schlosser
482
Mark Curtis
501
David Armstrong
516

Max du Preez and Jacques Pauw
191
Paul Foot
214
Robert Fisk
255
Seumas Milne
284
Amira Hass
332
Reporting the Truth about Iraq 19982004
531
Richard NortonTaylor
553
Robert Fisk
566
Edward W Said
583
Sources
602

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Sobre el autor (2011)

John Pilger grew up in Sydney, Australia. He was a war correspondent, author and film-maker. He twice won British journalism's highest award, that of Journalist of the Year, for his work all over the world, notably in Cambodia and Vietnam. He was also voted International Reporter of the Year and winner of the United Nations Associated Peace Prize and Gold Medal. For his broadcasting, he won France's Reporter Sans Frontières, an American television Academy Award, an Emmy, and the Richard Dimbleby Award, given by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. In 2003, he received the Sophie Prize for 'thirty years of exposing deception and improving human rights'. He died in December 2023.

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