
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
Free Speech and Unfree News: The Paradox of Press Freedom in America
Sam Lebovic
€ 63.28
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Free Speech and Unfree News: The Paradox of Press Freedom in America
Hardcover. Does America have a free press? Many who say yes appeal to First Amendment protections against censorship. Sam Lebovic shows that free speech, on its own, is not sufficient to produce a free press and helps us understand the crises that beset the press amid media consolidation, a secretive national security state, and the daily newspaper's decline. Num Pages: 330 pages. BIC Classification: 1KBB; HBJK; JFD; JPA. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 235 x 156. .
Does America have a free press? Many who answer yes appeal to First Amendment protections against government censorship. But in this comprehensive history of press freedom as it has existed in theory, law, and practice, Sam Lebovic shows that, on its own, the right of free speech has been insufficient to produce a free press. Exploring persistent worries about the quality and diversity of news in the modern American press, Lebovic recovers a mid-century vision of unfettered public access to information and a right to the news. Yet as the meaning of press freedom was contested in various arenas-Supreme Court cases on censorship, efforts to regulate the newspaper industry, state secrecy and freedom of information law, unionization of journalists, rise of the New Journalism-Americans defined freedom of the press as nothing more than the right to publish without censorship. The idea of a right to all the news was forgotten. Free Speech and Unfree News compels us to reexamine what freedom of the press means in a democratic society-and helps us make better sense of the crises that beset the press amid corporate consolidation in media industries, a secretive national security state, and the daily newspaper's decline.
Product Details
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Weight
521g
Number of Pages
330
Place of Publication
Cambridge, Mass, United States
ISBN
9780674659773
SKU
V9780674659773
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Sam Lebovic
Sam Lebovic is Assistant Professor of History at George Mason University.
Reviews for Free Speech and Unfree News: The Paradox of Press Freedom in America
Extremely original and well-written...[Lebovic] shows fascinating relationships among many different topics that have not previously been juxtaposed.
David M. Rabban Reviews in American History (06/01/2017) [A] smart
and timely
book.
Nicole Hemmer U.S. News and World Report (06/06/2017) Interesting, nuanced, and thoughtful...A relevant and thought provoking book.
Bonnie Brennen Journal of Communication (04/01/2017) Examines the hazy relationship between press freedoms and the actual execution of the press's democratic mission...An engaging, well-written book about an enduring problem in American democracy.
Jared Schroeder Political Science Quarterly (01/01/2018) [Lebovic] argue[s] that the dominant conception of civil liberties is insufficiently ambitious. [He] worr[ies] that as formulated, civil liberties are as much a tool for the powerful as for the powerless...Offer[s] important correctives to the celebratory accounts of civil liberties that we so often tell ourselves.
(03/23/2017) Lebovic's book is compelling reading. Well researched and written, it does a masterful job of logically weaving together the legal, social, economic, and political threads that have created the fabric of American press freedom.
(09/01/2017) A deep examination of the legal, political, social, and cultural discussions of the role of the press in America in the twentieth century...It [offers] a narrative that is lacking in other classic press freedom books.
Daxton R. Chip Stewart Journalism History (04/01/2017) One of the virtues of Free Speech and Unfree News is its resurrection of mid-century arguments long buried by the conventional wisdom of the media industries...Those hoping for a happier history will have a hard time dismissing this book. Its research, both historical and legal, is broad and deep.
(07/01/2017) At every stop on this wide-ranging tour of twentieth-century America, Lebovic's research is deep and persuasive...Free Speech and Unfree News is a splendid history of the travails of twentieth-century American journalism.
David Paul Nord Journal of Social History (09/01/2017) Free Speech and Unfree News: The Paradox of Press Freedom in America appears at an opportune moment in history...This is a thorough historical analysis that highlights the tension between an American commitment to a narrow definition of press freedom and access to, and reporting of, news that contributes to democratic self-government. It is superbly organized and very readable.
(12/01/2016) Provocative and stimulating. Lebovic shows that, although the American press has grown unusually free from government interference, it is constrained by the vast expansion of government secrecy and the intensification of the profit motive in the shifting news marketplace.
Michael Schudson, author of The Rise of the Right to Know How could a nation proud of its commitment to free expression also be a place where journalists must scour through leaked documents to learn basic facts about government policies? Sam Lebovic's spectacular and important book shows how the idea of a 'right to know' dropped out of twentieth-century understandings of the First Amendment. Essential for understanding what has become of an American free press.
Mary L. Dudziak, author of War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences
David M. Rabban Reviews in American History (06/01/2017) [A] smart
and timely
book.
Nicole Hemmer U.S. News and World Report (06/06/2017) Interesting, nuanced, and thoughtful...A relevant and thought provoking book.
Bonnie Brennen Journal of Communication (04/01/2017) Examines the hazy relationship between press freedoms and the actual execution of the press's democratic mission...An engaging, well-written book about an enduring problem in American democracy.
Jared Schroeder Political Science Quarterly (01/01/2018) [Lebovic] argue[s] that the dominant conception of civil liberties is insufficiently ambitious. [He] worr[ies] that as formulated, civil liberties are as much a tool for the powerful as for the powerless...Offer[s] important correctives to the celebratory accounts of civil liberties that we so often tell ourselves.
(03/23/2017) Lebovic's book is compelling reading. Well researched and written, it does a masterful job of logically weaving together the legal, social, economic, and political threads that have created the fabric of American press freedom.
(09/01/2017) A deep examination of the legal, political, social, and cultural discussions of the role of the press in America in the twentieth century...It [offers] a narrative that is lacking in other classic press freedom books.
Daxton R. Chip Stewart Journalism History (04/01/2017) One of the virtues of Free Speech and Unfree News is its resurrection of mid-century arguments long buried by the conventional wisdom of the media industries...Those hoping for a happier history will have a hard time dismissing this book. Its research, both historical and legal, is broad and deep.
(07/01/2017) At every stop on this wide-ranging tour of twentieth-century America, Lebovic's research is deep and persuasive...Free Speech and Unfree News is a splendid history of the travails of twentieth-century American journalism.
David Paul Nord Journal of Social History (09/01/2017) Free Speech and Unfree News: The Paradox of Press Freedom in America appears at an opportune moment in history...This is a thorough historical analysis that highlights the tension between an American commitment to a narrow definition of press freedom and access to, and reporting of, news that contributes to democratic self-government. It is superbly organized and very readable.
(12/01/2016) Provocative and stimulating. Lebovic shows that, although the American press has grown unusually free from government interference, it is constrained by the vast expansion of government secrecy and the intensification of the profit motive in the shifting news marketplace.
Michael Schudson, author of The Rise of the Right to Know How could a nation proud of its commitment to free expression also be a place where journalists must scour through leaked documents to learn basic facts about government policies? Sam Lebovic's spectacular and important book shows how the idea of a 'right to know' dropped out of twentieth-century understandings of the First Amendment. Essential for understanding what has become of an American free press.
Mary L. Dudziak, author of War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences