ABSTRACT

We Keep America on Top of the World is a lucid exploration of contemporary American journalism, with particular emphasis on its influential and controversial conponent - television news. Daniel Hallin's discussion encompasses the central and most controversial issues in the study of journalism: the wars in Vietnam and Central America; US-Soviet summits; the origin of the ten-second soundbite; the differences between print and television journalism; and the tension between professionalism and populism.
We Keep America on Top of the World offers a distinctive approach to understanding an institution torn between the imperatives of the market, political ideology and popular fashion, and journalistic professionalism. It will be essential reading for students of media, communication and journalism.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

American journalism and the public sphere

chapter 2|19 pages

The American news media

A critical theory perspective

chapter 3|17 pages

The media, the war in Vietnam, and polltical support

A critique of the thesis of an oppositional media

chapter 4|24 pages

From Vietnam to El Salvador

Hegemony and ideological change *

chapter 5|23 pages

‘We Keep America on Top of the World'

TV news in the age of Reagan *

chapter 6|18 pages

Speaking of the president

Political structure and representational form in US and Italian television news *

chapter 7|19 pages

Soundbite news

Television coverage of elections, 1968–88 *

chapter 8|16 pages

Summits and the constitution of an international public sphere

The Reagan-Gorbachev meetings as televised media events *