Foreign Correspondence: The Great Reporters and Their Times, Second Edition

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Syracuse 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
Bibliography
349
THE END OF THE GRAND CARTEL
355
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Sobre el autor (1995)

John Hohenberg has had a long and distinguished career as a journalist and diplomatic correspondent. While professor of journalism at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, he served as the administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes and secretary of the Pulitzer board. He is the author of numerous books, including the Bill Clinton Story: Winning the Presidency.

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