ABSTRACT

The newspaper is to the twentieth century what the novel was for the nineteenth century: the expression of popular sentiment. In the first of a three-volume study of journalism and what it has meant as a source of knowledge and as a mechanism for orchestrating mass ideology, Melvin J. Lasky provides a major overview. His research runs the gamut of material found in newspapers, from the trivial to the profound, from pseudo-science to habits of solid investigation.

The volume is divided into four parts. The first attacks deficiencies in grammar and syntax with examples from newspapers and magazines drawn from the German as well as English-language press. The second examines the key issues of journalism: accuracy and authenticity. Lasky provides an especially acute account of differences between active literacy and passive viewing, or the relationship of word and picture in defining authenticity.

The third part emphasizes the problem of bias in everything from racial reporting to cultural correctness. This is the first systematic attempt to study racial nomenclature, identity-labeling, and literary discrimination. Lasky follows closely the model set by George Orwell a half century earlier. The final section of the work covers the competition between popular media and the redefinition of pornography and its language. The volume closes with an examination of how the popular culture both influenced and was influential upon literary titans like Hemingway, Lawrence, and Tynan.

part 1|441 pages

A Question of Style

chapter 1|14 pages

Words Win, Language Loses

chapter 2|4 pages

The Equality of Sentences

chapter 3|21 pages

The Slang of an In-Lingo

chapter 4|4 pages

Sort of Suspicious, Kind of Guilty

chapter 5|21 pages

Of Plastic Prose, in Bits and Pieces

chapter 6|15 pages

Life-Style Crosses the Ocean and Returns

chapter 7|8 pages

Teutonics, or Refighting World War II

part 2|75 pages

The Art of Quotation

chapter 8|10 pages

The Little Goose Feet

chapter 9|18 pages

Television and Press “War”

chapter 10|4 pages

Mailer’s Tales of Oswald

chapter 11|15 pages

Citations Sown

chapter 12|7 pages

Words, Words, Words...

chapter 13|12 pages

The Strategy of Misquotation

chapter 14|5 pages

The Interviewer and the Interviewee

part 3|282 pages

The Quest for Meaning

chapter 15|27 pages

Race and the Color of Things

chapter 16|68 pages

The N-Word and the J-Word

chapter 17|7 pages

The Art of Punditry

chapter 18|12 pages

In the Pseuds’ Corner

chapter 19|8 pages

Pop Kulcher

chapter 20|18 pages

The Art of Explanation

chapter 21|12 pages

Keeping Up with the Avant-Garde

chapter 22|4 pages

Hard Words and Generation Gaps

part 4|137 pages

The F-word and Other Obscenities

chapter 23|11 pages

Skirmishes in the Sex War

chapter 24|2 pages

World War II, Fifty Years After

chapter 25|4 pages

A Trio of As*ter*isk*s

chapter 26|29 pages

Gender in the Combat Zone

chapter 27|59 pages

Remembering the Founding Fathers