Beyond the Front Lines: How the News Media Cover a World Shaped by War

Beyond the Front Lines: How the News Media Cover a World Shaped by War

by PhilipSeib (Author)

Synopsis

The recent war with Iraq had the greatest impact on journalism since the Vietnam War. And news reports of the war often a series of breathless stories from embedded reporters reflect a long and deeply flawed effort by American news organizations to provide effective war coverage. Before the next war arrives, how the news media cover war should be wisely scrutinized. The questions explored in this book include: Is the relationship between news organizations and the Pentagon too cozy? Were embedded journalists' reports over used and was context sacrificed in favour of drama? Has Al Jazeera's impact been underestimated, and is the role of the Internet fully understood? Has public diplomacy become mired in clumsy propaganda? Beyond the Front Lines examines all these issues, suggests ways journalists might carry out their job better, and redefines the role of the news media in a high tech, globalized, and dangerous world.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 208
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Published: 29 Jun 2004

ISBN 10: 1403965471
ISBN 13: 9781403965479

Media Reviews
Philip Seib is a journalist, a student of journalism, and a teacher of journalists, who has the rare talent of asking the right questions. His book, Beyond the Front Lines, has to be helpful to anyone who worries about the place of the news media in an increasingly complicated and dangerous world. --Stephen Hess, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution, and most recently co-editor of The Media and the War on Terrorism (Brookings, 2003)
The continuous, worldwide reach of the Internet and 24-hour TV news is transforming the way wars and global news are covered and understood. Philip Seib explains why the dramatic pictures on our TV screens and our computer monitors are so vivid and yet so frustratingly pixelated and distorted. His analysis is as vital for news consumers as it is for newsmakers and news gatherers.
-- Mark Stencel, senior editor, The Washington Pos t/washingtonpost.com
A fascinating, even-handed critique of how the media cover war in today's complex, globalized, and technology-driven environment. -- Mohammed el-Nawawy, international media scholar and co-author of Al-Jazeera,
A valuable book for journalists, military officers, and government officials alike. Seib raises all the right questions about the media and contemporary warfare, and offers some useful and even provocative answers. --Albert C. Pierce, Director, Center for the Study of Professional Military Ethics, U.S. Naval Academy
Beyond the Front Lines is a first-rate and much needed explanation of the contemporary domestic, foreign, and global media in the crises-laden post-9-11 era. Illuminated by the rich insider knowledge of the former journalist and the healthy detachment ofthe journalism professor Seib's volume offers an authoritative account of the new challenges and responsibilities that journalists, news organizations--and governmental decision makers face in the changed geopolitical realities of the early 21st Century. The well-written volume deserves not only the attention of journalists, students of communication, political science, and sociology but of the interest general public as well. -- Brigitte L. Nacos, Columbia University
In Beyond the Front Lines, Philip Seib presents a highly readable and thought-provoking review of news media coverage of the 2003 war in Iraq. He examines journalistic triumphs and defeats and raises the tough questions that must be addressed by the news media before the next major U.S. military conflict. An outstanding work!
--Kathy R. Fitzpatrick, Attorney and Associate Professor and Director, MA in Public Relations and Advertising, DePaul University
Seib raises some thought-provoking questions about how the US media portray war. . . This book will serve as a good conversation starter in classrooms. -- Choice

Philip Seib is a journalist, a student of journalism, and a teacher of journalists, who has the rare talent of asking the right questions. His book, Beyond the Front Lines, has to be helpful to anyone who worries about the place of the news media in an increasingly complicated and dangerous world. --Stephen Hess, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution, and most recently co-editor of The Media and the War on Terrorism (Brookings, 2003)

The continuous, worldwide reach of the Internet and 24-hour TV news is transforming the way wars and global news are covered and understood. Philip Seib explains why the dramatic pictures on our TV screens and our computer monitors are so vivid and yet so frustratingly pixelated and distorted. His analysis is as vital for news consumers as it is for newsmakers and news gatherers.
-- Mark Stencel, senior editor, The Washington Pos t/washingtonpost.com

A fascinating, even-handed critique of how the media cover war in today's complex, globalized, and technology-driven environment. -- Mohammed el-Nawawy, international media scholar and co-author of Al-Jazeera .

A valuable book for journalists, military officers, and government officials alike. Seib raises all the right questions about the media and contemporary warfare, and offers some useful and even provocative answers. --Albert C. Pierce, Director, Center for the Study of Professional Military Ethics, U.S. Naval Academy

Beyond the Front Lines is a first-rate and much needed explanation of the contemporary domestic, foreign, andglobal media in the crises-laden post-9-11 era. Illuminated by the rich insider knowledge of the former journalist and the healthy detachment of the journalism professor Seib's volume offers an authoritative account of the new challenges and responsibilities that journalists, news organizations--and governmental decision makers face in the changed geopolitical realities of the early 21st Century. The well-written volume deserves not only the attention of journalists, students of communication, political science, and sociology but of the interest general public as well. -- Brigitte L. Nacos, Columbia University

In Beyond the Front Lines, Philip Seib presents a highly readable and thought-provoking review of news media coverage of the 2003 war in Iraq. He examines journalistic triumphs and defeats and raises the tough questions that must be addressed by the news media before the next major U.S. military conflict. An outstanding work!
--Kathy R. Fitzpatrick, Attorney and Associate Professor and Director, MA in Public Relations and Advertising, DePaul University

Seib raises some thought-provoking questions about how the US media portray war. . . This book will serve as a good conversation starter in classrooms. -- Choice

'Philip Seib is a journalist, a student of journalism, and a teacher of journalists, who has the rare talent of asking the right questions. His book, Beyond the Front Lines, has to be helpful to anyone who worries about the place of the news media in an increasingly complicated and dangerous world.' - Stephen Hess, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution and Co-editor of The Media and the War on Terrorism

'The continuous, worldwide reach of the Internet and 24-hour TV news is transforming the way wars and global news are covered and understood. Philip Seib explains why the dramatic pictures on our TV screens and our computer monitors are so vivid and yet so frustratingly pixelated and distorted. His analysis is as vital for news consumers as it is for newsmakers and news gatherers.' - Mark Stencel, Senior Editor, The Washington Post

'A fascinating, even-handed critique of how the media cover war in today's complex, globalized, and technology-driven environment.' - Mohammed el-Nawawy, international media scholar and Co-author of Al-Jazeera

'A valuable book for journalists, military officers, and government officials alike. Seib raises all the right questions about the media and contemporary warfare, and offers some useful and even provocative answers.' - Albert C. Pierce, Director, Center for the Study of Professional Military Ethics, U.S. Naval Academy

'Beyond the Front Lines is a first-rate and much needed explanation of the contemporary domestic, foreign, and global media in the crises-laden post-9-11 era. Illuminated by the rich insider knowledge of the former journalist and the healthy detachment of the journalism professor, Seib's volume offers an authoritative account of the new challenges and responsibilities that journalists, news organizations and governmental decision makers face in the changed geopolitical realities of the early 21st Century. The well-written volume deserves not only the attention of journalists, students of communication, political science, and sociology but of the interest general public as well.' - Brigitte L. Nacos, Columbia University, USA

'In Beyond the Front Lines, Philip Seib presents a highly readable and thought-provoking review of news media coverage of the 2003 war in Iraq. He examines journalistic triumphs and defeats and raises the tough questions that must be addressed by the news media before the next major U.S. military conflict. An outstanding work!' - Kathy R. Fitzpatrick, Attorney and Associate Professor and Director, MA in Public Relations and Advertising, DePaul University, USA

'Seib raises some thought-provoking questions about how the US media portray war. . . This book will serve as a good conversation starter in classrooms.' - Choice

'This is an intelligent, tightly argued and interesting book that seeks to examine various transformations in US journalsim in response to the 2003 Iraq war.' - Marcus Leaning, International Journal of Radical Mass Media Criticism

Author Bio
PHILIP SEIB is Professor of Journalism at Marquette University, Wisconsin, USA. He is author or editor of over eight books, including Headline Diplomacy, Going Live, and The Global Journalist.