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Book Cover
E-book
Author McDevitt, Michael (Professor of journalism), author.

Title Where ideas go to die / Michael McDevitt
Published New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2020]

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Description 1 online resource (xii, 259 pages)
Contents Journalism and intellect : a vexed relationship -- Peopling of the journalistic imagination : four kinds of anti-intellectualism -- Eclipse of reflexivity in the rise of Trump -- The academic-media nexus -- Policing of intellectual transgressions : news as a recursive regime -- Social drama at macro and micro levels : the fractal control of dissent -- Deviant in residence : idea rendering and repair in the parochial press -- Closing of the journalism mind : anti-intellectualism among college students -- In my buggy : how dangerous professors seed intellect in a hybrid field -- What intellectual journalism would look like
Summary "Where Ideas Go to Die explores the troubled relationship of US journalism and intellect. A defender of common sense, the press is irked at intellect yet often dependent on its critical autonomy. A postwar observation from Richard Hofstadter applies to contemporary journalists: "Men do not rise in the morning, grin at themselves in their mirrors, and say: 'Ah, today I shall torment an intellectual and strangle an idea!'" The book nevertheless documents the prowess of news media in the policing of intellect. Control extends beyond suppression of ideas and ways of thinking to the aggressive rendering of dissent into deviance. The social control of intellect by journalism is accompanied by social control of journalism in newsrooms and in classrooms where norms are cultivated. Anti-intellectualism consequently operates like dark matter in media, a presence inferred by its effects rather than directly observed or acknowledged. When journalists anticipate a punitive public, the reified resentment is no more real than the fiction of omnipotent citizens in democratic theory, yet the audience imagined compels how intellect is rendered in the news as nuisance, deviance, or object of ridicule. Journalism's contribution to the social control of ideas is poignantly democratic: audiences are cast in consequential roles that affirm their wisdom in a closed, self-referential system. The book concludes with a discussion about what intellectual journalism would look like. Interviews with 25 "dangerous professors" demonstrate how alliances in the academic-media nexus can seed intellect in newswork"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 20, 2020)
Subject Journalism -- Social aspects -- United States
Journalism -- Political aspects -- United States
Journalism -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- Social aspects -- United States
Democracy -- United States
Social control -- United States
Democracy
Intellectual life
Journalism -- Political aspects
Journalism -- Social aspects
Social control
SUBJECT United States -- Intellectual life -- 21st century
Subject United States
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2019049153
ISBN 9780190869960
0190869968
9780197519448
019751944X
9780190869977
0190869976