This multi-disciplinary anthology provides new perspectives on the journalists role in knowledge generation in the newspaper agecovering diverse topics from fake news to new technologies.
Fake news, journalistic authority, and the introduction of cutting-edge technologies are often viewed as new topics in journalism. However, these issues were prevalent long before the twenty-first century. Connecting for the first time two burgeoning strands of researcha newly perceived history of knowledge and the study of journalismJournalists and Knowledge Practices provides insights into the journalists role in the world of knowledge in the newspaper age (ca. 1860s to 1970s). This multi-disciplinary anthology asks how journalists conducted their work and reconstructs histories of journalistic practices in specific regional constellations in Europe and North America. From fake news writing to inventing psychological concepts, integrating electric telegrams to fabricating photographs, explaining pandemics to creating communities, these case studies written by distinguished scholars from various disciplines in the humanities show how notions of fact and truth were shaped, new technologies integrated, and knowledge transfers arranged. This book is crucial reading for scholars and students interested in the historically changing relationships between journalistic practices and the generation and dissemination of knowledge.
This volume is crucial reading for scholars and students interested in the history of journalistic practice.
This multi-disciplinary anthology provides new perspectives on the journalists role in knowledge generation in the newspaper age - covering diverse topics from fake news to new technologies.
Part I
1. "I Was There Today": Fake Eyewitnessing and Journalistic Authority, from
Fontane to Relotius
Petra McGillen
2. "Have We La Grippe?": A Washington Case Study of Reporting the "Russian
Influenza" (18891890)
E. Thomas Ewing
3. Why Marmaduke Mizzle and the Good Ship Wabble Fooled No One: Fake News and
Metajournalistic Discourse in the Era of Journalistic Professionalization
Andie Tucher
Part II
4. What it Means to Be a Journalist: Constructing the Journalistic Persona at
the End of the Weimar Republic
Hansjakob Ziemer
5. Secret Press Agents: When Journalists, Propagandists, and Spies Seemed
Indistinguishable
Heidi Tworek
Part III Technologies
6. Shortness and Speed in Journalism: The Electric Telegram and the
Circulation of Knowledge in Germany and France in 1860
Lisa Bolz
7. Fabricating Authentic Pictures: Press Photography as a Transnational Mode
of Observation at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Malte Zierenberg
8. Inattentive Subjects: The Emergence of a Photojournalistic Norm
Annie Rudd
Part IV Knowledge Transfers
9. "Like a Modern Harun al Raschid": Herman Heijermanss 1910 Reports on the
Herzberge Mental Asylum in Berlin
Eric J. Engstrom
10. A Peasant among Peasants: Maurice Hinduss Transnational Revolutionary
Journalism
Elena Matveeva
11. Pop or Popularization? The Boundaries between Social Science and
Journalism
Susanne Schmidt
Hansjakob Ziemer received his PhD in Modern History from the Humboldt Universität zu Berlin in 2007, having also studied at Stanford and Oxford. He is senior research scholar and head of cooperation and communication at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin.