Foreign Correspondence: The Great Reporters and Their Times, Second EditionSyracuse University Press, 1 jun 1995 - 378 páginas This extensively revised edition reads like an adventure story about the vital role of the foreign correspondent throughout history. From the roles of Winston Churchill and Georges Clemenceau to those of some of history's greatest war correspondents from Ernie Pyle to Peter Arnett, Hohenberg, himself a reporter of considerable standing, distills the wars and historical moments that have shaped world politics. In the second edition, Hohenberg emphasizes the American experience, particularly the recent role of television and daily newspaper correspondents in Vietnam, the Gulf War, and the post-Cold War crises. He also examines of the role of the foreign correspondent in the future and the impact of new media technologies on this profession. |
Índice
The Master Correspondents | 26 |
FIND LIVINGSTONE | 38 |
Reports from a Changing World | 49 |
The Challenge of World War I | 80 |
THE BIRTH OF THE SOVIET UNION | 101 |
THE UNITED STATES AS A WORLD POWER | 109 |
Not So Brave Not So | 147 |
The Darkening Horizon | 157 |
The Ordeal of World War II | 199 |
The Peace That Failed | 248 |
Surviving the Cold War | 267 |
Tomorrows Foreign Correspondents | 299 |
Notes | 327 |
349 | |
355 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Foreign Correspondence: The Great Reporters and Their Times, Second Edition John Hohenberg Vista previa restringida - 1995 |
Foreign Correspondence: The Great Reporters and Their Times, Second Edition John Hohenberg Vista de fragmentos - 1995 |
Términos y frases comunes
abroad agency Allied American announced April army atomic attack August battle became began Berger Berlin Bigart bomb British broadcast cable censorship Chicago Daily Chicago Tribune China Chinese Churchill Communist corre cover despite Diem dispatches Duranty editor enemy Ernie Pyle Europe fighting fire forces foreign correspondents France French German Gibbons Gramling guerrilla Havas Hearst History Hitler Homer Bigart Ibid Italian Japan Japanese journalism journalist Kennedy Khrushchev killed Korea land later Laurence London Daily Matthews military Miller Morris Moscow Mowrer Mussolini nation Nazi newspapers night North Northcliffe paper Paris passim peace President published Pulitzer Prize radio Relman Morin reporting Reuters Russian Saigon Shanghai Shirer South Vietnam Soviet Union spondents staff Stalin Steed story Telegraph Third Reich Times's tion Tokyo told took troops United Vietcong Vietnamese Washington Webb Miller White House William wrote York Herald Tribune