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Liberty and the News
A01=Walter Lippmann
Abrams Case
Author_Walter Lippmann
Category=JBCT
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Category=JHB
Category=JPVH
Category=KNTP2
Common Carriers
democratic theory
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Feeble Minded People
Holmes's Reasoning
Holmes’s Reasoning
Incurable Desire
Inexorable Necessities
information distortion
journalism impact on democracy
media bias
Milton's Areopagitica
Milton’s Areopagitica
Modem Psychology
political communication research
Possessive Impulses
press freedom studies
Professional Political Science
public opinion formation
Ray Stannard Baker
Silly Leaflets
Sporadic Exposures
Unregulated Private Enterprise
Vice Versa
Viscount Northcliffe
Walter Llppmann
Product details
- ISBN 9781138527218
- Weight: 350g
- Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
- Publication Date: 08 Jun 2018
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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This little gem of a book, which first appeared in 1920, was written in Walter Lippmann's thirtieth year. He was still full of the passionate faith in democracy that was evident in his writings before the First World War. From today's point of view, Lippmann's argument seems unusually prescient. He was troubled by distortions in newspaper journalism, but was also deeply aware of the need to protect a free press. Lippmann believed that toleration of alternative beliefs was essential to maintaining the vitality of democracy. Liberty and the News is a key transitional work in the corpus of Lippmann's writings. For it is here that he proposes that public opinion is largely a response not to truths but rather to a "pseudo-environment" which exists between people and the external world. Lippmann was worried that if the beliefs that get exchanged between people are hollow, and bear only a purely accidental relationship to the world as it truly is, then the entire case for democracy is in danger of having been built on sand. His concerns remain very much alive and important.
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