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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lewis Raven WallacePublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.313kg ISBN: 9780226826585ISBN 10: 0226826589 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 12 April 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. How Black Lives Matter Made the News 2. The Deviants: Race, Lynching, and the Origins of “Objectivity” 3. The Agitators: Journalists as Labor Leaders 4. Drowning in Facts: “Objectivity,” Ambiguity, and Vietnam 5. “Public Radio Voice” 6. Straight News, Gay Media, and the AIDS Crisis 7. Journalism’s Purity Ritual 8. “Can’t You Find Any More Women to Attack?”: What Happens When Facts Don’t Matter 9. Truth and the Lost Cause 10. The “Assault on Reality”: Trans People and Subjectivity 11. The View from Somewhere Conclusion: The End of Journalism Acknowledgments Further Reading IndexReviewsNuanced and subtle. . . A compelling addition to the ongoing conversation on journalism and how it is practiced and consumed. * Kirkus Reviews * Democracy has been dying in the darkness for quite some time. What The View From Somewhere makes dazzlingly clear is that saving journalism will mean saving it from a false notion of objectivity. * The New Republic * [A] thoughtfully researched series of essays. . . . Wallace makes his case by carefully tracing the history of so-called objectivity in journalism. . . . As his story moves into the present, [he] persuasively argues that collective action can remedy traditional reporting's blind spots. * Bookforum * I've always been fascinated by the idea of objectivity and how those in power are able to dictate what is truth and what is acceptable in journalism. With everything happening right now in the world, reading about how Black, queer, and other marginalized reporters have navigated and challenged this idea throughout history has been particularly illuminating and comforting. * The Atlantic * In an age when traditional journalistic practices and assumptions are failing, this book should be on the desk of every journalist and every student of journalism. . . . [Wallace] shows how journalism can move away from the traditional, self-destructive professional model to a more effective model of public journalism and citizen journalism. Essential. * CHOICE * An outstanding and urgently needed critique of journalistic orthodoxy. . . Ought to be required reading in journalism schools everywhere. * PopMatters * Wallace dissects modern definitions of 'neutrality' in news and points to journalism's historic trailblazers-queer, Black, and immigrant reporters-to remind us how marginalized people have suffered at the hands of so-called 'objective news' and how we must urgently resist and reframe those definitions. An essential book for reporters, editors, and consumers of news. * Seema Yasmin, Emmy Award-winning journalist, medical doctor, and Stanford University professor * The View From Somewhere is brilliant. Wallace slays the myth of journalistic objectivity, forcing the reader to wrestle with something profound: that all readers and creators of journalism have subjectivities, and that we can better perceive and create depictions of truth if we all examine these subjectivities instead of pretending that they don't exist. * Steven Thrasher, journalist and Northwestern University professor * Wallace asks the right questions and makes a powerful case for a reexamination of what journalism is and how it can best serve the public. American journalists will readily admit, I think, that our industry has let down the broader community in recent years. Wallace posits a new solution for how we might avoid the mistakes of the past and move forward in a productive way. The View from Somewhere is both a fascinating dissection of our political body and a passionate plea for reform. It's also a darn good read. * Celeste Headlee, author of We Need to Talk: How to Have Conversations That Matter * “Nuanced and subtle. . . A compelling addition to the ongoing conversation on journalism and how it is practiced and consumed.” * Kirkus Reviews * ""Democracy has been dying in the darkness for quite some time. What The View From Somewhere makes dazzlingly clear is that saving journalism will mean saving it from a false notion of objectivity."" * The New Republic * ""[A] thoughtfully researched series of essays. . . . Wallace makes his case by carefully tracing the history of so-called objectivity in journalism. . . . As his story moves into the present, [he] persuasively argues that collective action can remedy traditional reporting’s blind spots."" * Bookforum * ""I’ve always been fascinated by the idea of objectivity and how those in power are able to dictate what is truth and what is acceptable in journalism. With everything happening right now in the world, reading about how Black, queer, and other marginalized reporters have navigated and challenged this idea throughout history has been particularly illuminating and comforting."" * The Atlantic * ""In an age when traditional journalistic practices and assumptions are failing, this book should be on the desk of every journalist and every student of journalism. . . . [Wallace] shows how journalism can move away from the traditional, self-destructive professional model to a more effective model of public journalism and citizen journalism. Essential."" * CHOICE * ""An outstanding and urgently needed critique of journalistic orthodoxy. . . Ought to be required reading in journalism schools everywhere."" * PopMatters * “Wallace dissects modern definitions of ‘neutrality’ in news and points to journalism’s historic trailblazers—queer, Black, and immigrant reporters—to remind us how marginalized people have suffered at the hands of so-called ‘objective news’ and how we must urgently resist and reframe those definitions. An essential book for reporters, editors, and consumers of news.” * Seema Yasmin, Emmy Award–winning journalist, medical doctor, and Stanford University professor * “The View From Somewhere is brilliant. Wallace slays the myth of journalistic objectivity, forcing the reader to wrestle with something profound: that all readers and creators of journalism have subjectivities, and that we can better perceive and create depictions of truth if we all examine these subjectivities instead of pretending that they don’t exist.” * Steven Thrasher, journalist and Northwestern University professor * “Wallace asks the right questions and makes a powerful case for a reexamination of what journalism is and how it can best serve the public. American journalists will readily admit, I think, that our industry has let down the broader community in recent years. Wallace posits a new solution for how we might avoid the mistakes of the past and move forward in a productive way. The View from Somewhere is both a fascinating dissection of our political body and a passionate plea for reform. It's also a darn good read.” * Celeste Headlee, author of We Need to Talk: How to Have Conversations That Matter * Author InformationLewis Raven Wallace is an independent journalist, a co-founder of Press On, a southern movement journalism collective, and the host of The View from Somewhere podcast. He previously worked in public radio and is a longtime activist engaged in prison abolition, racial justice, and queer and trans liberation. He is a white transgender person from the Midwest and is now based in North Carolina. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |