This book examines Japan's victory over Russia in 1904–05 and how it overhauled press–military relations, ending sixty years of battlefield freedom for correspondents. The authors argue that Japan controlled access and allowed only a narrowly constrained view of the war to circulate, thus creating the template for all modern wars.
This book examines Japan's victory over Russia in 1904–05 and how it overhauled press–military relations, ending sixty years of battlefield freedom for correspondents. The authors argue that Japan controlled access and allowed only a narrowly constrained view of the war to circulate, thus creating the template for all modern wars.
This book examines the journalistic coverage and challenges during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05, what some have called World War Zero. The authors explore how Japan delayed and regulated correspondents so they could do no harm to the nation's ambitions at home or abroad and implemented methods of shaping the news. They argue Japan helped to shape the modern world of journalism by creating and packaging "truth."
“This study revolutionizes the history of war correspondence by placing the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05 as the birthplace of press policies that shaped what 'truths' the public would consume about the century of horrific wars to follow. The authors' riveting accounts of reporters--ranging from Jack London to Hector Fuller, and scaffolded on scholarship that spans three continents--will change the way you look at today's news media.”
In Journalism and the Russo-Japanese War, Sweeney and Roelsgaard seek to present a clear description of the role of the press during the Russo-Japenese War and the impact that conflict had on the future of journalism during military combat. This book makes a very engaging and important argument that clearly helps the reader to better understand the nature of the modern media and some of the important events that have influenced its development. Overall, the authors do a good job in presenting the various issues that journalist faced in gaining access in order to report on the war.
Journalism HistoryFor a war that's not much talked about these days, the 1904-05 Russo-Japanese War was pivotal not just for its antagonists but for the entire world. It launched victorious Japan, the first Asian power to defeat a European one in the modern era, on its destructive path toward imperial expansion, which eventually morphed into World War II. For the Russian Empire, soundly trounced in battle after battle, defeat marked the end of its military aspirations in the Far East and helped trigger the 1905 Revolution, which led to the 1917 Revolution and all that followed.
Journalism scholars Michael S. Sweeney and Natascha Toft Roelsgaard argue that it also triggered another key historical development in helping to shape the rise of modern forms of propaganda and censorship, particularly as practised in wartime.
In their superbly researched study Journalism and the Russo-Japanese War, they argue that Japan's then-unprecedented treatment of western war correspondents helped establish a template which has persisted around the world to greater or lesser degrees to this day....
Sweeney and Roelsgaard offer a fascinating, engaging and erudite study of this process, shining an enthralling and thought-provoking light on an often-forgotten conflict, the reporters who covered it, and the impact that war had on shaping the journalism we know today.
PopmattersMichael S. Sweeney is professor in the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University.
Natascha Toft Roelsgaard is doctoral student in the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University.
This book examines the journalistic coverage and challenges during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05, what some have called World War Zero. The authors explore how Japan delayed and regulated correspondents so they could do no harm to the nation's ambitions at home or abroad and implemented methods of shaping the news. They argue Japan helped to shape the modern world of journalism by creating and packaging "truth."
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