The War Correspondent

The War Correspondent

by Greg McLaughlin
The War Correspondent

The War Correspondent

by Greg McLaughlin

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Overview

"The War Correspondent" looks at the role of the war reporter today in context with contemporary issues: the perks and the risks of the job; the tendency for western journalists to take sides in civil conflicts like Bosnia and Kosovo; the media politics of international intervention in humanitarian crises; the seductive power of military public relations; and of course the commercial and technological pressures of an intensely concentrated, competitive news media environment. The book features interviews with prominent war and foreign correspondents such as John Pilger, Robert Fisk, Maggie O'Kane and Christiane Amanpour.

A special case study in military-media relations during NATO's bombing of Serbia/Kosovo in 1999 suggests that in spite of widespread passivity among the correspondents who attended the daily briefings in Brussels, some sections of the news media were at least prepared to ask some hard questions of NATO strategy and policy.

Greg McLaughlin argues that the future for war reporting and foreign correspondence will be determined not so much by professional imperatives but by military pressures and market forces outside the control of the journalist. The self-serving myth that war stories are no longer what "consumers" want disguises the reality that foreign news is becoming too expensive to produce. Unless "our boys" are directly involved in combat, wars and rumors of wars will continue to slip down the media agenda as "the rest of the day's news".


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781783717590
Publisher: Pluto Press
Publication date: 02/20/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 275,999
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Greg McLaughlin is an Associate of the Centre for Media Research at Ulster University. He is the author of The War Correspondent (Pluto, 2nd edition; 2016), and co-author with Stephen Baker of The Propaganda of Peace: The Role of Media and Culture in the Northern Ireland Peace Process (2010) and The British Media and Bloody Sunday (2015).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Abbreviations
1. Introduction
Part I: The War Correspondent in Historical Perspective
2. The War Correspondent: Risk, Motivation and Tradition
3. Journalism, Objectivity and War
4. From Luckless Tribe to Wireless Tribe: The Impact of Media Technologies on War Reporting
Part II: The War Correspondent and the Military
5. Getting to Know Each Other: From Crimea to Vietnam
6. Learning and Forgetting: From the Falklands to the Gulf
7. Goodbye Vietnam Syndrome: The Embed System in Afghanistan and Iraq
Part III: The War Correspondent and Ideological Frameworks
8. Reporting the Cold War and the New World Order
9. Reporting the ‘War on Terror’ and the Return of the Evil Empire
10. Conclusions: ‘Telling Truth To Power’ – the Ultimate Role of the War Correspondent?
Appendices
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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