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020 _a0745644732 (pbk.)
020 _a9780745644738 (pbk.)
020 _a9780745644721 (hbk.)
020 _a0745644724 (hbk.)
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050 1 4 _aPN 4751
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082 0 0 _a070.4
100 1 _aMuhlmann, Géraldine,
_d1972-
240 1 0 _aDu journalisme en démocratie.
_lEnglish
245 1 0 _aJournalism for democracy /
_cGeraldine Muhlmann ; translated by Jean Birrell.
250 _aEnglish ed.
260 _aCambridge, UK ;
_aMalden, MA, USA :
_bPolity,
_c2010.
300 _aviii, 270 p. ;
_c23 cm.
500 _aFirst published in French as: Du journalisme en démocratie. Paris : Payot, 2004.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [253]-263) and index.
505 _aIntroduction. Chapter 1. Critiquing journalism: a difficult exercise. 1. The public: hostage to journalists. 2. Journalists: hostages to the public. 3. Two poles, two risks. What next? Chapter 2. The notion of 'public', and what can be expected of it. 1. The premises of the notion of 'public': liberal England in the seventeenth century. 2. Kant and the principle of publicity (Offentlichkeit). 3. French Enlightenment and American Enlightenment. 4. The denunciation of the naiveties of the notion of 'public': the problem of the domination of the 'homogenous' in democracy. Chapter 3. A first ideal-critique: the journalist-flaneur. 1. Varying the gaze. 2. An ambiguous and frustrating ideal. 3. Fruitless exasperation: Karl Kraus as a modern Sisyphus. Chapter 4. A second ideal-critique: the journalist-at-war. 1. The journalism of the young Karl Marx (1842-43). 2. The crisis of 1843: towards a radical critique of public space. 3. Journalism, an ongoing problem: Marx as journalist-at-war. Chapter 5. A third ideal-critique: journalism as a 'conflictual unifying' of the democratic community. 1. Gabriel Tarde and an answer to Gustave Le Bon. 2. The sociologists of Chicago (R. E. Park, H. M. Hughes) faced with the reality of an 'integrating' journalist. 3. The risk of myth. 4. Towards a 'conflictual unifying'. Two journalistic acts. Chapter 6. The limits inherent to the figure of the 'spectator', and what they tell us about democracy. 1. The journalism of decentring as the search for the limits of 'seeing'. 2. The Sartrean critique of the position of the spectator. 3. From the gaze to listening. Jean Hatzfeld on the Rwandan genocide. Epilogue.
520 _a* Muhlmann is highly regarded as one of the outstanding young scholars of journalism and political communication. * Polity recently published A Political History of Journalism by the same author. This book is designed as a companion volume; it focuses on the relation of journalism to democracy.
546 _aTranslated from the French.
650 4 _aPeriodismo
_91333
650 4 _aPeriodismo
_91392
_xAspectos políticos
650 4 _aDemocracia
_9411
700 1 _916471
_aBirrell, Jean
_etraductora
906 _a7
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