Literary Journalism across the Globe: Journalistic Traditions and Transnational Influences
By John S. Bak (Editor), Soenke Zehle (Contribution by), Sonja Merljak Zdovc (Contribution by), William Dow (Contribution by), Nikki Hessell (Contribution by), Maria Lassila-Merisalo (Contribution by), Peiqin Chen (Contribution by), Sonia Fernandez Parratt (Contribution by), Isabel Soares Santos (Contribution by), Rutger de Graaf (Contribution by), David Abrahamson (Contribution by), C. W. Dingemanse (Contribution by), Edvaldo Pereira Lima (Contribution by), Willa Maree McDonald (Contribution by), John C. Hartsock (Contribution by), Norman Sims (Contribution by), Jenny McKay (Contribution by)
Paperback
$36.95
By John S. Bak (Editor), Soenke Zehle (Contribution by), Sonja Merljak Zdovc (Contribution by), William Dow (Contribution by), Nikki Hessell (Contribution by), Maria Lassila-Merisalo (Contribution by), Peiqin Chen (Contribution by), Sonia Fernandez Parratt (Contribution by), Isabel Soares Santos (Contribution by), Rutger de Graaf (Contribution by), David Abrahamson (Contribution by), C. W. Dingemanse (Contribution by), Edvaldo Pereira Lima (Contribution by), Willa Maree McDonald (Contribution by), John C. Hartsock (Contribution by), Norman Sims (Contribution by), Jenny McKay (Contribution by)
Premium Members save an extra 10% and all Members collect stamps to save with Rewards. 10 stamps = $5.Learn More
This item is currently out of stock online.
Select a store to view item availability.
At the end of the nineteenth century, several countries were developing journalistic traditions similar to what we identify today as literary reportage or literary journalism. Yet throughout most of the twentieth century, in particular after World War I, that tradition was overshadowed and even marginalized by the general perception among democratic states that journalism ought to be either “objective,” as in the American tradition, or “polemical,” as in the European. Nonetheless, literary ...






















