History Of Magazines
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The history of journalism spans the growth of technology and trade, marked by the advent of specialized techniques for gathering and disseminating information on a regular basis that has caused, as one history of journalism surmises, the steady increase of "the scope of news available to us and the speed with which it is transmitted. Before the printing press was invented, word of mouth was the primary source of news. Returning
merchant A merchant is a person who trades in commodities produced by other people, especially one who trades with foreign countries. Historically, a merchant is anyone who is involved in business or trade. Merchants have operated for as long as indust ...
s, sailors, travellers brought news back to the mainland, and this was then picked up by pedlars and travelling players and spread from town to town. Ancient scribes often wrote this information down. This transmission of news was highly unreliable and died out with the invention of the printing press. Newspapers (and to a lesser extent, magazines) have always been the primary medium of journalists since the 18th century, radio and television in the 20th century, and the Internet in the 21st century.


Early and basic journalism


Europe

In 1556, the government of
Venice Venice ( ; it, Venezia ; vec, Venesia or ) is a city in northeastern Italy and the capital of the Veneto Regions of Italy, region. It is built on a group of 118 small islands that are separated by canals and linked by over 400  ...
first published the monthly ''Notizie scritte'' ("Written notices") which cost one gazzetta,Wan-Press.org
, A Newspaper Timeline, World Association of Newspapers
a Venetian coin of the time, the name of which eventually came to mean "newspaper". These
avvisi Journalism of Early Modern Europe was composed originally by handwritten newsletters used to convey political, military, and economic news quickly and efficiently throughout Europe during the early modern era (1500-1700). They were often written ...
were handwritten newsletters and used to convey political, military, and economic
news News is information about current events. This may be provided through many different Media (communication), media: word of mouth, printing, Mail, postal systems, broadcasting, Telecommunications, electronic communication, or through the tes ...
quickly and efficiently throughout Europe, more specifically Italy, during the early modern era (1500–1800)—sharing some characteristics of newspapers, though usually not considered true newspapers. However, none of these publications fully met the modern criteria for proper newspapers, as they were typically not intended for the general public and restricted to a certain range of topics. Early publications played into the development of what would today be recognized as the newspaper, which came about around 1601. Around the 15th and 16th centuries, in England and France, long news accounts called "relations" were published; in Spain, they were called "Relaciones". Single event news publications were printed in the
broadsheet A broadsheet is the largest newspaper format and is characterized by long Vertical and horizontal, vertical pages, typically of . Other common newspaper formats include the smaller Berliner (format), Berliner and Tabloid (newspaper format), ta ...
format, which was often posted. These publications also appeared as pamphlets and small booklets (for longer narratives, often written in a letter format), often containing woodcut illustrations. Literacy rates were low in comparison to today, and these news publications were often read aloud (literacy and oral culture were, in a sense, existing side by side in this scenario). By 1400, businessmen in Italian and German cities were compiling handwritten chronicles of important news events, and circulating them to their business connections. The idea of using a printing press for this material first appeared in Germany around 1600. Early precursors were the so-called ''
Messrelation A Messrelation (IPA: /ˈmɛsʀɛlaˌt͡si̯oːn/, Early Modern German for 'trade fair report') was a print published in the 16th to 18th century for the book fairs in Frankfurt and Leipzig (the largest in Europe at their time) which reported news ...
en'' ("trade fair reports") which were semi-annual news compilations for the large book fairs at Frankfurt and Leipzig, starting in the 1580s. The first true newspaper was the weekly '' Relation aller Fuernemmen und gedenckwürdigen Historien'' ("Collection of all distinguished and memorable news"), started in Strasbourg in 1605. The '' Avisa Relation oder Zeitung'' was published in Wolfenbüttel from 1609, and gazettes soon were established in Frankfurt (1615), Berlin (1617) and Hamburg (1618). By 1650, 30 German cities had active gazettes. A semi-yearly news chronicle, in Latin, the Mercurius Gallobelgicus, was published at Cologne between 1594 and 1635, but it was not the model for other publications. The news circulated between newsletters through well-established channels in 17th century Europe. Antwerp was the hub of two networks, one linking France, Britain, Germany, and the Netherlands; the other linking Italy, Spain and Portugal. Favorite topics included wars, military affairs, diplomacy, and court business and gossip. After 1600 the national governments in France and England began printing official newsletters. In 1622 the first English-language weekly magazine, "A current of General News" was published and distributed in England in an 8- to 24-page quarto format.


Revolutionary changes in the 19th century

Newspapers in all major countries became much more important in the 19th century because of a series of technical, business, political, and cultural changes. High-speed presses and cheap wood-based newsprint made large circulations possible. The rapid expansion of elementary education meant a vast increase in the number of potential readers. Political parties sponsored newspapers at the local and national levels. Toward the end of the century, advertising became well-established and became the main source of revenue for newspaper owners. This led to a race to obtain the largest possible circulation, often followed by downplaying partisanship so that members of all parties would buy a paper. The number of newspapers in Europe in the 1860s and 1870s was steady at about 6,000; then it doubled to 12,000 in 1900. In the 1860s and 1870s, most newspapers were four pages of editorials, reprinted speeches, excerpts from novels and poetry and a few small local ads. They were expensive, and most readers went to a café to look over the latest issue. There were major national papers in each capital city, such as the London ''Times,'' the London ''Post,'' the Paris ''Temps'' and so on. They were expensive and directed to the National political elite. Every decade the presses became faster, and the invention of automatic typesetting in the 1880s made feasible the overnight printing of a large morning newspaper. Cheap wood pulp replaced the much more expensive rag paper. A major cultural innovation was the professionalization of news gathering, handled by specialist reporters. Liberalism led to freedom of the press, and ended newspaper taxes, along with a sharp reduction to government censorship. Entrepreneurs interested in profit increasingly replaced politicians interested in shaping party positions, so there was dramatic outreach to a larger subscription base. The price fell to a penny. In New York, " Yellow Journalism" used sensationalism, comics (they were colored yellow), a strong emphasis on team sports, reduced coverage of political details and speeches, a new emphasis on crime, and a vastly expanded advertising section featuring especially major department stores. Women had previously been ignored, but now they were given multiple advice columns on family and household and fashion issues, and the advertising was increasingly pitched to them.


Italy


Early developments

Before the development of the first regularly issued printed newspapers in the mid-17th century, from about 1500 to 1700, hand-written newsletters, known by various names such as ''avvisi'', ''reporti, gazzette, ragguagli'', were the fastest and most efficient means by which military and political news could be circulated in Italy. Used to convey political, military and economic news quickly, hand-written ''avvisi'' spread through Italy, generated by the desire of each court to know the activities of opposing and even allied courts. Over time, this information that had been provided for free eventually was sold by specialists and distributed by couriers in order to meet the high demand for such a product. From the middle of the 16th century Italian newsletter writers, called ''menanti'', ''reportisti'', or ''gazzettieri,'' set up news services, the regularity of which may have been dictated by the postal service network in their region. The ''avvisi'' found their origins, and peaked, in early modern Rome and Venice. It is not difficult to understand why these two cities, in particular, should have played a central role in the development of a 'news service'. The words of
Vittorio Siri Vittorio Siri or Francesco Siri (1608–1685) was an Italian mathematician, monk and historian. Life Siri was born in Parma, and studied at the Benedictine convent of San Giovanni Evangelista, Parma, where he pronounced his vows on December ...
, explaining his reasons for choosing the place where he would work as a contemporary historian, offer one explanation. He says he needed 'a city like that which Plutarch sought for a historian, that is, where there was a great and powerful court, full of
ambassador An ambassador is an official envoy, especially a high-ranking diplomat who represents a state and is usually accredited to another sovereign state or to an international organization as the resident representative of their own government or sov ...
s and minsters', where 'more than in any other city in the world one could see a multitude of personages and soldiers who had been ambassadors at all the courts of Europe and where civil questions were managed by nobles, where people practiced who possessed refined judicial abilities and were knowledgeable about the affairs of princes. Siri was referring to Venice, but Rome, the capital of the Catholic Church, was no different. Indeed, only a few years earlier
Maiolino Bisaccioni Maiolino Bisaccioni (1582-1663) was an Italian mercenary and author of both novels and chronicles of contemporary history, mainly of events during the Thirty Years' Wars. Biography Maiolino was born in Ferrara, the son of Giralamo Bisaccioni and L ...
, one of the many adventurous historian-gazetteers of the period, had declared 'Rome, as you know sthe place where all the news in the world is found.Infelise, Mario. "Roman Avvisi: Information and Politics in the Seventeenth Century." Court and Politics in Papal Rome, 1492–1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. pp. 212–213. The content and character of the ''avvisi'' differed between the two cities. Roman ''avvisi'' contained ecclesiastical, political, and criminal intrigue, taking advantage of opposing factions willing to divulge state secrets or official gossip for their own benefit. These were then read by church and government officials as well as the nobility. Such was the partisan (and sometimes scandalous) comments on public affairs that they became censored by the Pope and several copyists were imprisoned or executed. The celebrated Roman jurist
Prospero Farinacci Prospero Farinacci (1 November 1554 – 31 December 1618) was an Italian Renaissance jurist, lawyer and judge. His ''Praxis et Theorica Criminalis'' (Practice and Theory of Criminal Law) was the strongest influence on criminal law in Civil law co ...
argued that the revelation of state secrets by the writers of newsletters was a crime that had to be punished no less seriously than the crimen laesae maiestatis. Venetian ''avvisi'' were more conservative in their coverage of such events and more preoccupied with commercial matters.


17th century

Printed ''avvisi'' did not appear in Italy until the first half of the seventeenth century. Possible reasons for this were easier avoidance of censorship in hand-written form, reluctance of
copyist A copyist is a person that makes duplications of the same thing. The term is sometimes used for artists who make copies of other artists' paintings. However, the modern use of the term is almost entirely confined to music copyists, who are emplo ...
s to use printing technology (which they viewed as a threat to their job security), and clients desiring the status offered by hand-written information as opposed to the "vulgar" print. By the late 1630s manuscript news-sheets diminished in importance because of their limited circulation and high costs. Scholars suppose that the first newspaper printed in Italy was edited in Florence in 1636 by Amador Massi and Lorenzo Landi, but no issue was discovered to confirm that conjecture, therefore the newspaper '' Genova'', printed from 1639, shall be considered the oldest printed newspaper in Italy. By the mid-seventeenth century irregularly printed news-sheets had become routine in many Italian cities. The ''Gazzetta di Mantova'', the world's oldest newspaper still existing and published with the same name, was established in June 1664. In 1668 the first Italian scientific journal was published, the ''Giornale de' Letterati'', following the ''
Journal des sçavans The ''Journal des sçavans'' (later renamed ''Journal des savans'' and then ''Journal des savants,'' lit. ''Journal of the Learned''), established by Denis de Sallo, is the earliest academic journal published in Europe. It is thought to be the ear ...
'' and the ''
Philosophical Transactions ''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society'' is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society. In its earliest days, it was a private venture of the Royal Society's secretary. It was established in 1665, making it the first journa ...
'' in style. The ''Giornale de' Letterati'' had little political significance, but played an important role in disseminating the results of research and cultural work done outside Italy and in spreading news on Italian culture throughout Europe.


France


1632 to 1815

The first newspaper in France, the ''
Gazette de France ''La Gazette'' (), originally ''Gazette de France'', was the first weekly magazine published in France. It was founded by Théophraste Renaudot and published its first edition on 30 May 1631. It progressively became the mouthpiece of one royal ...
'', was established in 1632 by the king's physician Theophrastus Renaudot (1586–1653), with the patronage of Louis XIII. All newspapers were subject to prepublication censorship, and served as instruments of propaganda for the monarchy. Under the ancien regime, the most prominent magazines were '' Mercure de France'', ''
Journal des sçavans The ''Journal des sçavans'' (later renamed ''Journal des savans'' and then ''Journal des savants,'' lit. ''Journal of the Learned''), established by Denis de Sallo, is the earliest academic journal published in Europe. It is thought to be the ear ...
'', founded in 1665 for scientists, and ''
Gazette de France ''La Gazette'' (), originally ''Gazette de France'', was the first weekly magazine published in France. It was founded by Théophraste Renaudot and published its first edition on 30 May 1631. It progressively became the mouthpiece of one royal ...
'', founded in 1631. Jean Loret was one of France's first journalists. He disseminated the weekly news of music, dance and Parisian society from 1650 until 1665 in verse, in what he called a ''gazette burlesque'', assembled in three volumes of ''La Muse Historique'' (1650, 1660, 1665). The French press lagged a generation behind the British, for they catered to the needs the aristocracy, while the newer British counterparts were oriented toward the middle and working classes. Periodicals were censored by the central government in Paris. They were not totally quiescent politically—often they criticized Church abuses and bureaucratic ineptitude. They supported the monarchy and they played at most a small role in stimulating the revolution. During the Revolution new periodicals played central roles as propaganda organs for various factions.
Jean-Paul Marat Jean-Paul Marat (; born Mara; 24 May 1743 – 13 July 1793) was a French political theorist, physician, and scientist. A journalist and politician during the French Revolution, he was a vigorous defender of the ''sans-culottes'', a radical ...
(1743–1793) was the most prominent editor. His '' L'Ami du peuple'' advocated vigorously for the rights of the lower classes against the enemies of the people Marat hated; it closed when he was assassinated. After 1800 Napoleon reimposed strict censorship.


1815 to 1914

Magazines flourished after Napoleon left in 1815. Most were based in Paris and most emphasized literature, poetry and stories. They served religious, cultural and political communities. In times of political crisis they expressed and helped shape the views of their readership and thereby were major elements in the changing political culture. For example, there were eight Catholic periodicals in 1830 in Paris. None were officially owned or sponsored by the Church and they reflected a range of opinions among educated Catholics about current issues, such as the 1830 July Revolution that overthrew the Bourbon monarchy. Several were strong supporters of the Bourbon kings, but all eight ultimately urged support for the new government, putting their appeals in terms of preserving civil order. They often discussed the relationship between church and state. Generally, they urged priests to focus on spiritual matters and not engage in politics. Historian M. Patricia Dougherty says this process created a distance between the Church and the new monarch and enabled Catholics to develop a new understanding of church-state relationships and the source of political authority.


20th century

The press was handicapped during the war by shortages of newsprint and young journalists, and by an abundance of censorship designed to maintain home front morale by minimizing bad war news. The Parisian newspapers were largely stagnant after the war; circulation inched up to 6 million a day from 5 million in 1910. The major postwar success story was '' Paris Soir''; which lacked any political agenda and was dedicated to providing a mix of sensational reporting to aid circulation, and serious articles to build prestige. By 1939, its circulation was over 1.7 million, double that of its nearest rival the tabloid ''Le Petit Parisien.'' In addition to its daily paper ''Paris Soir'' sponsored a highly successful women's magazine ''Marie-Claire.'' Another magazine '' Match'' was modelled after the photojournalism of the American magazine ''Life.'' John Gunther wrote in 1940 that of the more than 100 daily newspapers in Paris, two (''L'Humanité'' and '' Action Française''s publication) were honest; "Most of the others, from top to bottom, have news columns for sale". He reported that ''Bec et Ongles'' was simultaneously subsidized by the French government, German government, and Alexandre Stavisky, and that Italy allegedly paid 65 million francs to French newspapers in 1935. France was a democratic society in the 1930s, but the people were kept in the dark about critical issues of foreign policy. The government tightly controlled all of the media to promulgate propaganda to support the government's foreign policy of
appeasement Appeasement in an international context is a diplomatic policy of making political, material, or territorial concessions to an aggressive power in order to avoid conflict. The term is most often applied to the foreign policy of the UK governm ...
to the aggressions of Italy and especially Nazi Germany. There were 253 daily newspapers, all owned separately. The five major national papers based in Paris were all under the control of special interests, especially right-wing political and business interests that supported appeasement. They were all venal, taking large secret subsidies to promote the policies of various special interests. Many leading journalists were secretly on the government payroll. The regional and local newspapers were heavily dependent on government advertising and published news and editorials to suit Paris. Most of the international news was distributed through the Havas agency, which was largely controlled by the government.


Britain


16th century

By the end of the sixteenth century the word ''gazzetta'' began to spread from Italy to England. The definition given to the term by John Florio in his Italian- English
dictionary A dictionary is a listing of lexemes from the lexicon of one or more specific languages, often arranged alphabetically (or by radical and stroke for ideographic languages), which may include information on definitions, usage, etymologies ...
''A Worlde of Wordes'' of 1598 is significant; under the Italian entry for the plural form ''gazzette'' there is a precise definition: “the daily newse or intelligence written from Italie, namely from Rome and Venice, tales running newes.” Florio records another two connected terms: the verb ''gazzettare'' meaning “to write or report daily occurencees one to another, to tell flying tales” and the profession of ''gazzettiere'' defined as “an intelligencer or such as have daily occurrences.” Towards the end of the sixteenth century the Italian term ''gazzetta'' became popular. Francis Bacon in his own correspondence uses the Italian term ''gazzetta'' rather than a matching English term or the anglicised word “gazette.” In the same time the term ''reporto'', widely used in Venice with the same meaning, was carried to England as the word report. Consequently ''reportista'' (reporter) became synonymous with a compiler of newsletters or gazettes.


17th century

On 7 November 1665, The ''
London Gazette London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
'' (at first called The ''Oxford Gazette'') began publication. It was published twice a week. Other English papers started to publish three times a week, and later the first daily papers emerged. Publication was controlled under the Licensing Act of 1662, but the Act's lapses from 1679 to 1685 and from 1695 onwards encouraged a number of new titles. '' Mercurius Caledonius'' founded in Edinburgh in 1660, was Scotland's first but short-lived newspaper. Only 12 editions were published during 1660 and 1661. Early British newspapers typically included short articles, ephemeral topics, some illustrations and service articles (classifieds). They were often written by multiple authors, although the authors' identities were often obscured. They began to contain some advertisements, and they did not yet include sections.


20th century

By 1900 popular journalism in Britain aimed at the largest possible audience, including the working class, had proven a success and made its profits through advertising. Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe (1865–1922), "More than anyone... shaped the modern press. Developments he introduced or harnessed remain central: broad contents, exploitation of advertising revenue to subsidize prices, aggressive marketing, subordinate regional markets, independence from party control. His ''
Daily Mail The ''Daily Mail'' is a British daily middle-market tabloid newspaper and news websitePeter Wilb"Paul Dacre of the Daily Mail: The man who hates liberal Britain", ''New Statesman'', 19 December 2013 (online version: 2 January 2014) publish ...
'' held the world record for daily circulation until his death. Prime Minister Lord Salisbury quipped it was "written by office boys for office boys". Socialist and labour newspapers also proliferated and in 1912 the ''
Daily Herald Daily or The Daily may refer to: Journalism * Daily newspaper, newspaper issued on five to seven day of most weeks * ''The Daily'' (podcast), a podcast by ''The New York Times'' * ''The Daily'' (News Corporation), a defunct US-based iPad new ...
'' was launched as the first daily newspaper of the trade union and labour movement. Newspapers reached their peak of importance during the First World War, in part because wartime issues were so urgent and newsworthy, while members of Parliament were constrained by the all-party coalition government from attacking the government. By 1914 Northcliffe controlled 40 percent of the morning newspaper circulation in Britain, 45 percent of the evening and 15 percent of the Sunday circulation. He eagerly tried to turn it into political power, especially in attacking the government in the Shell Crisis of 1915.
Lord Beaverbrook William Maxwell Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook (25 May 1879 – 9 June 1964), generally known as Lord Beaverbrook, was a Canadian-British newspaper publisher and backstage politician who was an influential figure in British media and politics o ...
said he was, "the greatest figure who ever strode down Fleet Street." A.J.P. Taylor, however, says, "Northcliffe could destroy when he used the news properly. He could not step into the vacant place. He aspired to power instead of influence, and as a result, forfeited both." Other powerful editors included C. P. Scott of the ''Manchester Guardian'', James Louis Garvin of '' The Observer'' and
Henry William Massingham Henry William Massingham (25 May 1860 – 27 August 1924) was an English journalist, editor of ''The Nation and Athenaeum, The Nation'' from 1907 to 1923. In his time it was considered the leading British Radical weekly. Life He j ...
of the highly influential weekly magazine of opinion, ''The Nation''.


Germany


Denmark

Danish news media first appeared in the 1540s, when handwritten fly sheets reported on the news. In 1666,
Anders Bording Anders Christensen Bording (21 January 1619 – 24 May 1677) was a Danish poet and journalist. He was born in Ribe. He is notable for his epigrams, ballads, occasional poems and epistles, as well as for publishing the first Danish newspaper, t ...
, the father of Danish journalism, began a state paper. The royal privilege to bring out a newspaper was issued to Joachim Wielandt in 1720. University officials handled the censorship, but in 1770 Denmark became one of the first nations of the world to provide for press freedom; it ended in 1799. The press in 1795–1814, led by intellectuals and civil servants, called out for a more just and modern society, and spoke out for the oppressed tenant farmers against the power of the old aristocracy. In 1834, the first liberal newspaper appeared one that gave much more emphasis to actual news content rather than opinions. The newspapers championed the Revolution of 1848 in Denmark. The new constitution of 1849 liberated the Danish press. Newspapers flourished in the second half of the 19th century, usually tied to one or another political party or labor union. Modernization, bringing in new features and mechanical techniques, appeared after 1900. The total circulation was 500,000 daily in 1901, more than doubling to 1.2 million in 1925. The German occupation brought informal censorship; some offending newspaper buildings were simply blown up by the Nazis. During the war, the underground produced 550 newspapers—small, surreptitiously printed sheets that encouraged sabotage and resistance. The appearance of a dozen editorial cartoons ridiculing Mohammed set off Muslim outrage and violent threats around the world. (see: Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy) The Muslim community decided the caricatures in the Copenhagen newspaper '' Jyllands-Posten'' in September 2005 represented another instance of Western animosity toward Islam and were so sacrilegious that the perpetrators deserved severe punishment. The historiography of the Danish press is rich with scholarly studies. Historians have made insights into Danish political, social and cultural history, finding that individual newspapers are valid analytical entities, which can be studied in terms of source, content, audience, media, and effect.


Russia


United States


Asia


China

Journalism in China before 1910 primarily served the international community. The main national newspapers in Chinese were published by Protestant missionary societies in order to reach the literate. Hard news was not their specialty, but they did train the first generation of Chinese journalists in Western standards of newsgathering, editorials, and advertising. Demands for reform and revolution were impossible for papers based inside China. Instead, such demands appeared in polemical papers based in Japan, for example, those edited by Liang Qichao (1873–1929). The '' overthrow of the old imperial regime in 1911'' produced a surge in Chinese nationalism, an end to censorship, and a demand for professional, nationwide journalism. All the major cities launched such efforts. Special attention was paid to China's role in World War I. to the disappointing
Paris Peace Conference Agreements and declarations resulting from meetings in Paris include: Listed by name Paris Accords may refer to: * Paris Accords, the agreements reached at the end of the London and Paris Conferences in 1954 concerning the post-war status of Germ ...
of 1919, and to the aggressive demands and actions of Japan against Chinese interests. Journalists created professional organizations and aspired to separate news from commentary. At the Press Congress of the World conference in Honolulu in 1921, the Chinese delegates were among the most Westernized and self-consciously professional journalists from the developing world. By the late 1920s, however, there was a much greater emphasis on advertising and expanding circulation, and much less interest in the sort of advocacy journalism that had inspired the revolutionaries.


India

The first newspaper in India was circulated in 1780 under the editorship of James Augustus Hicky, named ''
Bengal Gazette ''Hicky's Bengal Gazette or the Original Calcutta General Advertiser'' was an English-language weekly newspaper published in Kolkata (then Calcutta), the capital of British India(then Known as the Presidency of Fort William.. It was the first ...
''. On May 30, 1826 ''
Udant Martand ''Udant Martand'' (from Hindi, “The Rising Sun”) is the first Hindi language newspaper published in India. Started on 30 May 1826, from Calcutta (now Kolkata), the weekly newspaper was published every Tuesday by Pt. Jugal Kishore Shukla. I ...
'' (The Rising Sun), the first Hindi-language newspaper published in India, started from Calcutta (now Kolkata), published every Tuesday by Pt. Jugal Kishore Shukla. Maulawi Muhammad Baqir in 1836 founded the first Urdu-language newspaper the Delhi ''Urdu Akhbar''. India's press in the 1840s was a motley collection of small-circulation daily or weekly sheets printed on rickety presses. Few extended beyond their small communities and seldom tried to unite the many castes, tribes, and regional subcultures of India. The Anglo-Indian papers promoted purely British interests. Englishman Robert Knight (1825–1890) founded two important English-language newspapers that reached a broad Indian audience, '' The Times of India'' and '' The Statesman''. They promoted nationalism in India, as Knight introduced the people to the power of the press and made them familiar with political issues and the political process.


Latin America and the Caribbean

British influence extended globally through its colonies and its informal business relationships with merchants in major cities. They needed up-to-date market and political information. The ''Diário de Pernambuco'' was founded in Recife, Brazil, in 1825. ''El Mercurio'' was founded in Valparaiso, Chile, in 1827. The most influential newspaper in Peru, ''El Comercio'', first appeared in 1839. The ''Jornal do Commercio'' was established in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1827. Much later Argentina founded its newspapers in Buenos Aires: ''La Prensa'' in 1869 and ''La Nacion'' in 1870. In Jamaica, there were a number of newspapers that represented the views of the white planters who owned slaves. These newspapers included titles such as the ''Royal Gazette, The Diary and Kingston Daily Advertiser, Cornwall Chronicle, Cornwall Gazette'', and ''Jamaica Courant''. In 1826, two free coloureds, Edward Jordan and Robert Osborn founded ''The Watchman'', which openly campaigned for the rights of free coloureds, and became Jamaica's first anti-slavery newspaper. In 1830, the criticism of the slave-owning hierarchy was too much, and the Jamaican colonial authorities arrested Jordan, the editor, and charged him with constructive treason. However, Jordan was eventually acquitted, and he eventually became Mayor of Kingston in post-Emancipation Jamaica. On the abolition of slavery in the 1830s, Gleaner Company was founded by two Jamaican Jewish brothers, Joshua and Jacob De Cordova, budding businessmen who represented the new class of light-skinned Jamaicans taking over post-Emancipation Jamaica. While the ''Gleaner'' represented the new establishment for the next century, there was a growing black, nationalist movement that campaigned for increased political representation and rights in the early twentieth century. To this end, Osmond Theodore Fairclough founded ''Public Opinion'' in 1937. O.T. Fairclough was supported by radical journalists Frank Hill and H.P. Jacobs, and the first edition of this new newspaper tried to galvanize public opinion around a new nationalism. Strongly aligned to the People's National Party (PNP), ''Public Opinion'' counted among its journalists progressive figures such as
Roger Mais Roger Mais (; 11 August 1905 – 21 June 1955) was a Jamaican journalist, novelist, poet, and playwright. He was born to a middle-class family in Kingston, Jamaica. By 1951, he had won ten first prizes in West Indian literary competitions.Ha ...
, Una Marson,
Amy Bailey Amy Bailey OJ, OD, OBE, MBE (27 November 1895 – 3 October 1990) was a Jamaican educator, social worker and women's rights advocate. She was a co-founder of the Jamaican aid organization Save the Children and was the driving force behind the ...
,
Louis Marriott Louis Marriott (22 May 1935 – 1 August 2016) was a Jamaican actor, director, writer, broadcaster, the executive officer of the Michael Manley Foundation, and member of the Performing Right Society, Jamaica Federation of Musicians, and founding ...
,
Peter Abrahams Peter Henry Abrahams Deras (3 March 1919 – 18 January 2017), commonly known as Peter Abrahams, was a South African-born novelist, journalist and political commentator who in 1956 settled in Jamaica, where he lived for the rest of his life. Hi ...
, and future prime minister Michael Manley, among others. While ''Public Opinion'' campaigned for self-government, British prime minister
Winston Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (30 November 187424 January 1965) was a British statesman, soldier, and writer who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom twice, from 1940 to 1945 Winston Churchill in the Second World War, dur ...
made it known he had no intention of presiding "over the liquidation of the British Empire", and consequently the Jamaican nationalists in the PNP were disappointed with the watered-down constitution that was handed down to Jamaica in 1944. Mais wrote an article saying "Now we know why the draft of the new constitution has not been published before," because the underlings of Churchill were "all over the British Empire implementing the real imperial policy implicit in the statement by the Prime Minister". The British colonial police raided the offices of ''Public Opinion'', seized Mais's manuscript, arrested Mais himself, and convicted him of seditious libel, jailing him for six months.


Radio and television

The history of radio broadcasting begins in the 1920s and reached its apogee in the 1930s and 1940s. Experimental television was being studied before the 2nd world war, became operational in the late 1940s, and became widespread in the 1950s and 1960s, largely but not entirely displacing radio.


Internet journalism

The rapidly growing impact of the Internet, especially after 2000, brought "free" news and classified advertising to audiences that no longer cared for paid subscriptions. The Internet undercut the business model of many daily newspapers. Bankruptcy loomed across the U.S. and did hit such major papers as the ''Rocky Mountain news'' (Denver), the ''Chicago Tribune'' and the ''Los Angeles Times'', among many others. Chapman and Nuttall find that proposed solutions, such as multiplatforms, paywalls, PR-dominated news gathering, and shrinking staffs have not resolved the challenge. The result, they argue, is that journalism today is characterized by four themes: personalization, globalization, localization, and pauperization.


Historiography

Journalism historian David Nord has argued that in the 1960s and 1970s: : "In journalism history and media history, a new generation of scholars . . . criticised traditional histories of the media for being too insular, too decontextualized, too uncritical, too captive to the needs of professional training, and too enamoured of the biographies of men and media organizations." In 1974, James W. Carey identified the 'Problem of Journalism History'. The field was dominated by a Whig interpretation of journalism history. :"This views journalism history as the slow, steady expansion of freedom and knowledge from the political press to the commercial press, the setbacks into sensationalism and yellow journalism, the forward thrust into muck raking and social responsibility....the entire story is framed by those large impersonal forces buffeting the press: industrialization, urbanization and mass democracy. O'Malley says the criticism went too far because there was much of value in the deep scholarship of the earlier period.Tom O'Malley, "History, Historians and the Writing Newspaper History in the UK c.1945–1962," ''Media History'', (2012) 18#3, pp. 289–310.


See also

*
History of broadcasting It is generally recognized that the first radio transmission was made from a temporary station set up by Guglielmo Marconi in 1895 on the Isle of Wight. This followed on from pioneering work in the field by a number of people including Alessa ...
* History of newspaper publishing *
History of television The concept of television was the work of many individuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The first practical transmissions of moving images over a radio system used mechanical rotating perforated disks to scan a scene into a time-var ...
* News broadcasting * Newspaper * Online magazine *
Online newspaper An online newspaper (or electronic news or electronic news publication) is the online version of a newspaper, either as a stand-alone publication or as the online version of a printed periodical. Going online created more opportunities for newspa ...
* United States defamation law


References


Citations


Sources


History of Journalism lecture notes
by Dr. Wally Hastings, Northern State University, South Dakota


Further reading

* Bösch, Frank. ''Mass Media and Historical Change: Germany in International Perspective, 1400 to the Present'' (Berghahn, 2015). 212 pp
online review
* Burrowes, Carl Patrick. "Property, Power and Press Freedom: Emergence of the Fourth Estate, 1640–1789," ''Journalism & Communication Monographs'' (2011) 13#1 pp2–66, compares Britain, France, and the United States * Collins, Ross F. and E. M. Palmegiano, eds. ''The Rise of Western Journalism 1815–1914: Essays on the Press in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain and the United States'' (2007) * Conboy, Martin. ''Journalism: A Critical History'' (2004) * Crook; Tim. ''International Radio Journalism: History, Theory and Practice'' (Routledge, 1998
online
* Pettegree, Andrew. ''The invention of news: How the world came to know about itself'' (Yale UP, 2014). * Wolff, Michael. ''The Man Who Owns the News: Inside the Secret World of Rupert Murdoch'' (2008) 446 page
and text search
A media baron in Australia, UK and the US


Asia

* Desai, Mira K. "Journalism education in India: Maze or mosaic." in ''Global journalism education in the 21st century: Challenges and innovations'' (2017): 113–136
online
* Hassan, M. S. ''Two hundred years of Indian Press: Case of lopsided growth'', ''Media Asia'' (1980), 218–228. * Huang, C. "Towards a broadloid press approach: The transformation of China's newspaper industry since the 2000s." Journalism 19 (2015): 1–16
online
With bibliography pages 27–33. * Lagerkvist, Johan. ''After the Internet, Before Democracy'' (2010), the media in China * Lynch, Marc. ''Voices of the New Arab Public: Iraq, Al-Jazeera, and Middle East Politics Today'' (Columbia University Press 2006
online
* Rugh, William A. ''Arab Mass Media: Newspapers, Radio, and Television in Arab Politics'' (Praeger, 2004
online


Britain

* Andrews, Alexander. ''The history of British journalism: from the foundation of the newspaper press in England, to the repeal of the Stamp act in 1855'' (1859)
online old classic
* Briggs Asa. ''The BBC—the First Fifty Years'' (Oxford University Press, 1984). * Briggs Asa. ''The History of Broadcasting in the United Kingdom'' (Oxford University Press, 1961). * Clarke, Bob. ''From Grub Street to Fleet Street: An Illustrated History of English Newspapers to 1899'' (Ashgate, 2004) * Crisell, Andrew ''An Introductory History of British Broadcasting''. (2nd ed. 2002). * Hale, Oron James. ''Publicity and Diplomacy: With Special Reference to England and Germany, 1890–1914'' (1940
online
pp 13–41. * Herd, Harold. ''The March of Journalism: The Story of the British Press from 1622 to the Present Day'' (1952). * Jones, A. ''Powers of the Press: Newspapers, Power and the Public in Nineteenth-Century England'' (1996). * Lee, A. J. ''The Origins of the Popular Press in England, 1855–1914'' (1976). * Marr, Andrew. ''My trade: a short history of British journalism'' (2004) * Scannell, Paddy, and Cardiff, David. ''A Social History of British Broadcasting, Volume One, 1922–1939'' (Basil Blackwell, 1991). * Silberstein-Loeb, Jonathan. ''The International Distribution of News: The Associated Press, Press Association, and Reuters, 1848–1947'' (2014). * Wiener, Joel H. "The Americanization of the British press, 1830—1914." ''Media History'' 2#1–2 (1994): 61–74.


British Empire

* Cryle, Denis. ''Disreputable profession: journalists and journalism in colonial Australia'' (Central Queensland University Press, 1997). * Harvey, Ross. "Bringing the News to New Zealand: the supply and control of overseas news in the nineteenth century." ''Media History'' 8#1 (2002): 21–34. * Kesterton, Wilfred H. ''A history of journalism in Canada'' (1967). *O'Brien, Mark. ''The Fourth Estate: Journalism in Twentieth-Century Ireland'' (Manchester University Press 2017). * Peers Frank W. ''The Politics of Canadian Broadcasting, 1920–1951'' (University of Toronto Press, 1969). * Pearce, S. ''Shameless Scribblers: Australian Women's Journalism 1880–1995'' (Central Queensland University Press, 1998). * Sutherland, Fraser. ''The monthly epic: A history of Canadian magazines, 1789–1989'' (1989). * Vine, Josie. "If I Must Die, Let Me Die Drinking at an Inn': The Tradition of Alcohol Consumption in Australian Journalism" ''Australian Journalism Monographs'' (Griffith Centre for Cultural Research, Griffith University, vol 10, 2010
online
bibliography on journalists, pp 34–39 * Walker, R.B. ''The Newspaper Press in New South Wales: 1803–1920'' (1976). * Walker, R.B. ''Yesterday's News: A History of the Newspaper Press in New South Wales from 1920 to 1945'' (1980). * Walters, Ewart. ''We Come From Jamaica: The National Movement, 1937–1962'' (Ottawa: Boyd McRubie, 2014).


Europe

* Baron, Sabrina Alcorn, and Brendan Dooley, eds. ''The politics of information in Early Modern Europe'' (Routledge, 2005). * Bösch, Frank. ''Mass media and historical change: Germany in international perspective, 1400 to the present'' (Berghahn Books, 2015). * Censer, Jack. ''The French press in the age of Enlightenment'' (2002). * Collins, Ross F. and E. M. Palmegiano, eds. ''The Rise of Western Journalism 1815–1914: Essays on the Press in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain and the United States'' (2007). * Darnton, Robert and Daniel Roche, eds. ''Revolution in Print: the Press in France, 1775–1800'' (1989) * Dooley, Brendan, and Sabrina Baron, eds. ''The Politics of Information in Early Modern Europe'' (Routledge, 2001) * Espejo, Carmen. "European communication networks in the early modern age: A new framework of interpretation for the birth of journalism." ''Media history'' 17.2 (2011): 189–202
online
* Jubin, George. "France, Journalism in, 1933." ''Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly'' 10 (1933): 273–82
online
* Lehmann, Ulrich. "Le mot dans la mode: Fashion and literary journalism in Nineteenth-century France." (2009): 296–313
online
* Meserve, Margaret. "News from Negroponte: Politics, Popular Opinion, and Information Exchange in the First Decade of the Italian Press?." ''Renaissance Quarterly'' 59.2 (2006): 440–480. on 1470s * Verboord, Marc, and Susanne Janssen. "Arts Journalism And Its Packaging In France, Germany, The Netherlands And The United States, 1955–2005." ''Journalism Practice'' 9#6 (2015): 829–852.


United States

* Barnouw Erik. ''The Golden Web'' (Oxford University Press, 1968); ''The Image Empire: A History of Broadcasting in the United States, Vol. 3: From 1953'' (1970
excerpt and text search
''The Sponsor'' (1978); ''A Tower in Babel'' (1966), to 1933
excerpt and text search
a history of American broadcasting * Blanchard, Margaret A., ed. ''History of the Mass Media in the United States, An Encyclopedia''. (1998) * Craig, Douglas B. ''Fireside Politics: Radio and Political Culture in the United States, 1920–1940'' (2005) * DiGirolamo, Vincent, ''Crying the News: A History of America's Newsboys'' (2019) * Emery, Michael, Edwin Emery, and Nancy L. Roberts. ''The Press and America: An Interpretive History of the Mass Media'' 9th ed. (1999.), standard textbook; best place to start. * Hampton, Mark, and Martin Conboy. "Journalism history—a debate" ''Journalism Studies'' (2014) 15#2 pp 154–171. Hampton argues that journalism history should be integrated with cultural, political, and economic changes. Conboy reaffirms the need for disentangling journalism history more carefully from media history. * McCourt; Tom. ''Conflicting Communication Interests in America: The Case of National Public Radio'' (Praeger Publishers, 1999
online
* McKerns, Joseph P., ed. ''Biographical Dictionary of American Journalism''. (1989) * Marzolf, Marion. ''Up From the Footnote: A History of Women Journalists''. (1977) * Mott, Frank Luther. ''American Journalism: A History of Newspapers in the United States Through 250 Years, 1690–1940'' (1941). major reference source and interpretive history
online edition
* Nord, David Paul. ''Communities of Journalism: A History of American Newspapers and Their Readers''. (2001
excerpt and text search
* Schudson, Michael. ''Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers''. (1978)
excerpt and text search
* Sloan, W. David, James G. Stovall, and James D. Startt. ''The Media in America: A History'', 4th ed. (1999) * Starr, Paul. ''The Creation of the Media: Political origins of Modern Communications'' (2004), far ranging history of all forms of media in 19th and 20th century US and Europe; Pulitzer priz
excerpt and text search
* Streitmatter, Rodger. ''Mightier Than the Sword: How the News Media Have Shaped American History'' (199
online edition
* Vaughn, Stephen L., ed. '' Encyclopedia of American Journalism'' (2007) 636 page
excerpt and text search


Magazines

*Angeletti, Norberto, and Alberto Oliva. ''Magazines That Make History: Their Origins, Development, and Influence'' (2004), covers ''Time, Der Spiegel, Life, Paris Match, National Geographic, Reader's Digest, ¡Hola!'', and ''People'' *Brooker, Peter, and Andrew Thacker, eds. ''The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines: Volume I: Britain and Ireland 1880–1955'' (2009) * Haveman, Heather A. ''Magazines and the Making of America: Modernization, Community, and Print Culture, 1741–1860'' (Princeton University Press, 2015) *Mott, Frank Luther. ''A History of American Magazines'' (five volumes, 1930–1968), detailed coverage of all major magazines, 1741 to 1930. *Summer, David E. ''The Magazine Century: American Magazines Since 1900'' (Peter Lang Publishing; 2010) 242 pages. Examines the rapid growth of magazines throughout the 20th century and analyzes the form's current decline. *Wood, James P. ''Magazines in the United States'' (1971) * Würgler, Andreas
''National and Transnational News Distribution 1400–1800''
European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History (2010).


Historiography

* Buxton, William J., and Catherine McKercher. "Newspapers, magazines and journalism in Canada: Towards a critical historiography." ''Acadiensis'' (1988) 28#1 pp. 103–12
in JSTORalso online
* Daly, Chris. "The Historiography of Journalism History: Part 2: 'Toward a New Theory,'" ''American Journalism'', Winter 2009, Vol. 26 Issue 1, pp 148–155, stresses the tension between the imperative form of business model and the dominating culture of news *Dooley, Brendan. "From Literary Criticism to Systems Theory in Early Modern Journalism History," ''Journal of the History of Ideas'' (1990) 51#3 pp 461–86. *Espejo, Carmen. "European Communication Networks in the Early Modern Age: A new framework of interpretation for the birth of journalism," ''Media History'' (2011) 17#2 pp 189–202 * Wilke, Jürgen
''Journalism''
European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2013, retrieved: January 28, 2013.


External links


Biographical dictionary of 24,000+ British and Irish journalists who died between 1800 and 1960The History Of Journalism In India, The Emergence of Radio, Television and The Interneteuwp_Iw4ZehpP92G1XCdwzlZNJP0Qbdw2R40gQNU1mKBF80O5Gvw0/ David Joseph Marcou's History of Journalists on D-Day, June 6, 1944, Normandy, France, researched & written for British Heritage mag online in 2004 for 60th anniversary of D-Day
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