ABSTRACT

This book examines the history, theory and journalistic practice of profile writing. Profiles, and the practice of writing them, are of increasing interest to scholars of journalism because conflicts between the interviewer and the subject exemplify the changing nature of journalism itself. While the subject, often through the medium of their press representative, struggles to retain control of the interview space, the journalist seeks to subvert it. This interesting and multi-layered interaction, however, has rarely been subject to critical scrutiny, partly because profiles have traditionally been regarded as public relations exercises or as ‘soft’ journalism. However, chapters in this volume reveal not only that profiling has, historically, taken many different forms, but that the idea of the interview as a contested space has applications beyond the subject of celebrated individuals. The volume looks at the profile’s historical beginnings, at the contemporary manufacture of celebrity versus the ‘ordinary’, at profiling communities, countries and movements, at profiling the destitute, at sporting personalities and finally at profiling and trauma.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Profiling—Painting a Picture in Words

part |70 pages

History of the Profile

chapter |13 pages

The Pre-History of Profiles, 1380–1800

Chaucer, News Ballads, the English Civil War and Boswell

chapter |13 pages

Profiling Pitt

The First Political Profile and its Legacies

chapter |17 pages

Precursor to the Profile

The Character Sketch in Colonial Australia

chapter |10 pages

Profile and Counter-Profile

On Joseph Mitchell's Joe Goulds

chapter |15 pages

The Return of the Long-Form Profile

A Case Study of the Quarterly Essay and The Monthly in Australia

part |49 pages

The Manufacture of Celebrity and ‘the Ordinary'

chapter |16 pages

Disclosure and Enclosure

Revisiting Media Profiles of Jimmy Savile 1

chapter |19 pages

Profiles of Lived Experience

Charles Reznikoff, Muriel Rukeyser and Mark Nowak

part |44 pages

More than Just the Individual

chapter |14 pages

John Bull Scrambling for Africa

A Portrait of the English at the Heyday of Empire

chapter |13 pages

Promoting Women

Profiles and Feminism in the Women's Penny Paper/Woman's Herald

chapter |15 pages

Profiling Controversial Social Movements

Arundhati Roy's Challenges, Style and Insights

part |29 pages

This Sporting Life

chapter |14 pages

The Dark Side of the Moon of Walter Mitty

George Plimpton and the Reinvention of Reality

chapter |14 pages

New Rules of the Game

Sports Journalism and Profiles

part |31 pages

Profiling and the Trauma Narrative

chapter |15 pages

The Empathetic Profiler and Ethics

Trauma Narrative as Advocacy

chapter |15 pages

Profiling War

Managing Trauma in Reporting Horror—the Case of Boštjan Videmšek