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The Words Of War The Civil War Battle Reportage Of The New York Times And The Charleston Mercury And What The Historians Say Really Happened Donagh Bracken

  • SKU: BELL-4319078
The Words Of War The Civil War Battle Reportage Of The New York Times And The Charleston Mercury And What The Historians Say Really Happened Donagh Bracken
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The Words Of War The Civil War Battle Reportage Of The New York Times And The Charleston Mercury And What The Historians Say Really Happened Donagh Bracken instant download after payment.

Publisher: History Publishing Company
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 7.32 MB
Pages: 320
Author: Donagh Bracken
ISBN: 9781933909325, 1933909323
Language: English
Year: 2007

Product desciption

The Words Of War The Civil War Battle Reportage Of The New York Times And The Charleston Mercury And What The Historians Say Really Happened Donagh Bracken by Donagh Bracken 9781933909325, 1933909323 instant download after payment.

As the divided nation threw its sons into civil war, the home front demanded to know what was happening. Newspapers, North and South, responded by sending special war correspondents into the battlefront with the armies and navies of the Union and Confederacy. They reported what they saw and, in many instances, what they wanted to see. Thus was born American journalism as we know it today. In the North, The New York Times' correspondents accompanied the armies of Grant, Sherman, McClellan and other general officers and admirals in the Eastern and Western Theaters. The writings of Times correspondents Franc Wilkie, L.L.Crounse and many others set the structural standard for American war correspondence as we know it today. In the South, newspapers wrote with greater passion. Chief among the passion providers was the Charleston Mercury, the spark plug for Southern secession and the arch opposite of The New York Times. The writings of Robert Barnwell Rhett. Sr. and Jr. and George William Bagby writing as Hermes, brought a blood rush to their readers as they bore their witness to the Civil War. Placed in juxtaposition, the two newspapers capture not only the flavor of the time but also the fever of war. The modern reader can see, as each paper reports the same battle, how political belief alters the view of reality.

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