Marquette Books of Phoenix

Celebrating 20 Years of Service to the Academic and Public Communities

Home Page

Call for Textbooks

Academic Titles

Fiction/Trade Titles

Alexander the Great

Luminar Papers

China Business Book

In Tune with America

Murder in the Thumb

Jelly Beans & Peanuts

Gold Medal Killer

China Girl

Athena's Forum 3

Return to Innocence

Preview Titles

New Books

Mass Media Books

Adventures/Quixotic Pro

Contemporary Media Ethics

How Media Really Work

Intro to Motion Pictures

Film Dictionary

Advertising's War on Terrorism

Dictionary of Mass Communication & Media Research

Watching the Watchdog

Research Methods for MC

Athena's Forum

Media, Mission & Morality

Media Essays

Watchdog the Watchdog

Sociology Titles

Grassroots History of HIV

Adventures/Quixotic Prof

Impact/Sexual Harassment

Global Media Books

Social Media Go to War

Cybermedia Go to War

Global Media Go to War

News Media React to 9/11

Global Media Journal

Through Their Eyes

Learning to Hate American

Global Media News Reader

Terrorism, Globalization

Media Ethics & Law

Farewell to Freedom

Defending the Good News

Call to Order

History Titles

Beyond the Ivory Tower

Hated Ideas

Athena's Forum 2

Cowichan Indians

Writing/Editing Books

Effective Editing Book

Raise Your Voice

Please Don't Do That

Fundamentals Journalism

Children's Books

Grandpa Loves Trains

Wind Seer

Kimo's Escape

Death Chant

Wind Seer 2

To Order Books

Textbook Review Policy

Meet Our Authors

Contact Us

Book Reviews

Press Releases

PREVIEW SELECTED PAGES FROM THIS BOOK

Scroll down to see review of this book in The Midwest Book Review
Document
Click to See Selected Pages from This Book
 
Click Image to Order Book
NEW

Hated Ideas and the American Civil War Press

Hazel Dicken-Garcia, University of Minnesota 
Giovanna Dell'Orto, University of Minnesota (alum)

Do Journalists Tolerate Hated Ideas?

One of the most cherished principles in American journalism is the notion that unpopular and even hated ideas deserve First Amendment protection and fair-handed treatment from journalists. But has this principle always existed, and how are hated ideas treated during times of crisis, such as war?

In this book, media historians Hazel Dicken-Garcia and Giovanna Dell’Orto search for some of the answers by analyzing newspaper coverage of hated ideas — such as abolitionism and slavery — during the American Civil War. They found that the Civil War strengthened the idea of journalism’s responsibility to the public; editors often had eloquent free speech discussions; and opposition presses were sometimes defended.

However, the data also showed that tolerance was the exception rather than the rule. "[E]ditors consistently supported the larger political system over any professional journalism ideology, the ‘common good’ over individual rights, and military ‘discretion’ over constitutional principles," the authors write.

The authors conclude that "although the editors’ intolerance makes their statements about the Constitution ... seem hollow, it must be remembered that they were in the midst of a highly abnormal national crisis. ... [T]he Civil War experience underscores the fact that marginalized ideas across history have persisted, often to become accepted as part of mainstream culture. Despite intolerance by journalists ... of certain ideas ... the First Amendment has continued to sustain civil liberties ... ."

Hated Ideas and the American Civil War Press presents a detailed and comprehensive analysis of newspaper coverage of such controversial subjects as abolitionism and slavery during the period of the American Civil War. The basic findings are that the Civil War conflict strengthened the idea of journalism's responsibility to the public, that newspaper editors often held eloquent free speech discussions, and that even opposition presses were sometimes defended under the ideas of free speech. Nevertheless, it was often the case that the principles of free speech and the tolerance for opposing ideas was not adhered to in the heat of events arising under wartime conditions. Hated Ideas and the American Civil War Press is a fascinating read that is as informed and informative as it is thoughtful and thought-provoking. A work of impressive and seminal scholarship that is especially commended reading for journalism students, free speech advocates, and Civil War buffs.  -The Midwest Book Review (February 2008)

Hazel Dicken-Garcia (Ph.D. University of Wisconsin) is a professor of journalism and mass communication at the University of Minnesota. She is author of Journalistic Standards in Nineteenth-Century America, which received the Kappa Tau Alpha Best Book Award in 1990. She received the Sidney Kobre Award, given by the American Journalism Historians Association for contributions to journalism history in 2006.

Giovanna Dell'Orto (Ph.D. University of Minnesota) has been studying 19th- century journalists' interpretation of free speech rights for more than 10 years. Her first book, Giving Meanings to the World, explored how the first U.S. newspaper foreign correspondents created images of the world for readers. She grew up in Italy and now lives in the United States.

359 pages / 5.25 x 8.25 format / Copyright 2008 / Includes CIP Data / ISBN: 978-0-922993-89-5 (cloth) $79.95 / ISBN: 978-0-922993-88-8 (paper) $39.95

Marquette Books LLC
16421 North 31st Avenue
Phoenix, Arizona 85053
509-290-9240 (voice)
books@marquettebooks.com / www.MarquetteBooks.com
Copyright © 2001-2021 Marquette Books LLC / All Rights Reserved