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British Journalism Review Index 1989-1999

A

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Aaronovitch, David. One of the Birtians hits back. Controversy Column. 4.4 (1993): 12-16.

– Rocking The Boat. Rev. of 'Death on the Rock,' by Roger Bolton. 1.4 (1990): 50-53.

accountability: see Seymour-Ure 10.3.

agony aunts: see Proops 1.4; Willans 4.2.

Aids: see Sarler 7.1.

Ainley, Beulah. Ubiquitous whites - invisible blacks. Research. 5.4 (1994): 71-74.

– Wanted: more blacks in the media. 9.4 (1998): 60-64.

Aitchison, James. Letter. 5.3 (1994): 71-72.

Aitken, Ian. A trumpet call from Number Ten. Rev. of Kill the Messenger, by Bernard Ingham. 2.4 (1991): 53-56.

– 'A truly superb reporter...' 7.1 (1996): 47-50.

– Man of the times. 6.2 (1995): 52-55.

Aitken, Jonathan: see Rusbridger 5.4.

Allen, Margaret. Up-market Porn. 1.4 (1990): 28-32.

American journalism: see Birdman 3.3; Boston 3.3; Editorial 1.4; Good man (Editorial) 4.4, 7.2, 8.3, 9.3, 9.4; Greengrass 7.1; Hagerty 5.2; Hill 10.4; Hodgson 5.1; Kirkhorn 1.4, 2.1; McManus 3.2; Rubenstein 3.1, 3.3, 4.3; Stephen 3.1; White 4.1; Winston 6.4.

American lobby: see Knight 7.4.

analysis: see Barnett 1.1-5.2; Fiddick 4.2; Jones 3.4; MacArthur 1.2-5.2; Redding 9.4; Sampson 7.3; Snoddy 2.2; Tusa 3.4; Williams 5.3.

Anderson, Alison, and Ivor Gaber. The yellowing of the Greens. Research. 4.2 (1993): 49-53.

Anderson, Steve. Hi mate, where's the fighting? The Gulf. 2.3 (1991): 12-16.

Anne, Princess: see Condon 1.3; Delano 5.4.

Archer, Jeffrey: see Hagerty 7.3.

Armour, Donald. A European newspaper: a bridge too far? 2.4 (1991): 14-18.

– Not yet the full truth in Muscovy. 3.1 (1992) 16-21.

– Platitudes from outer space? 6.1 (1995): 28-34.

– The Russian press in the struggle for power. 4.2 (1993): 27-32.

Arthur, Sylvia. Coping with the cold shoulder. 10.2 (1999): 58-62.

Asia: see Datta-Ray 5.4; van der Vat 9.2.

Astor, David: see Hodgson 3.2.

audience effects: see Editorial 4.2; Petley 5.3.

Australian press: see Delano 1.2, 2.4; Graham 9.2.

autobiographies: see books reviewed.


B

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Baistow, Tom The other side of that ha'penny. Rev. of Lords of Fleet Street: The Harmsworth Dynasty, by Richard Bourne. 2.3 (1991): 57-60.

Balkans: see Kosovo.

Barnett, Steven. An average war for television. Factfile. 2.3 (1991): 71- 73.

– And here is the news... but who cares? Factfile. 5.2 (1994): 62-63.

– Art versus reality: one up to art. Factfile. 2.2 (1990): 72-74.

– Broadcast News. Media Research. 1.1 (1989): 49-56.

– Do viewers really care about telly news? Factfile. 5.1 (1994): 67-69.

– Double standards at the BBC. 5.4 (1994): 56-59.

– Hijacked! - television and politics during the election. 3.2 (1992): 17-19.

– New news heralds a new era. Factfile. 3.4 (1992): 68-69.

– News at... when? Factfile. 3.3 (1992): 72-73; 4.3 (1993): 66-67.

– Of Morse... and Mann. Factfile. 4.2 (1993): 69-71.

– Plunging to a palmtop future? 7.3 (1996): 25-29.

– Pressure from the politicians. Factfile. 3.1 (1992): 67-68.

– Sliding down the market slope. Factfile. 4.1 (1993): 67-69.

– The BBC slips behind. Factfile. 2.4 (1991): 66-67.

– The Beeb back on form. Factfile. 4.4 (1993): 73-74.

– The viewers stay the course. Factfile. 3.2 (1992): 72-73.

– TV Current Affairs. Factfile. 1.2 (1990): 75-77.

– TV News: BBC Bias Revisited. Factfile. 1.4 (1990): 65-67.

– TV News: Up - For the Cup. Factfile. 2.1 (1990): 60-62.

– TV: The Political Bias? Factfile. 1.3 (1990): 63-67.

Barry, Gerald: see Cox 7.3.

Bartholomew, Harry Guy: see Cudlipp 8.2, Mullally 10.2.

Bates, Stephen. Brussels with the blinkers on. 10.1 (1999): 35-40.

Baylen, J. O. A history for historians. Rev. of Powers of the Press. Newspa pers, Power and the Public in Nineteenth-Century England, by Aled Jones. 8.2 (1997): 75-76.

– Birth of the glossies. Rev. of The Popular Magazine in Britain and the United States of America, 1880-1960, by David Reed. 10.2 (1999): 77-79.

– Chronicler of the appeasement set. Rev. of Fleet Street. Press Barons and Politics. The Journals of Collin Brooks, 1932-1940, ed. N. J. Crowson. 10.4 (1999): 78-80.

– Kelvin's earliest ancestor. Rev. of The Life and Strange Surprising Adven tures of Daniel Defoe, by Richard West. 9.1 (1998): 78-80.

– The essential guide to British Jewry. Rev. of The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841-1991, by David Cesarani. 5.2 (1994): 57-59.

– Three centuries of cartoon cruelty. Rev. of The Prime Ministers: An Irreverent Political History in Cartoons, by Kenneth Baker. 7.1 (1996): 74-76.

– Verdi's and Wagner's Victorian scourge. Rev. of Henry Fothergill Chorley. Victorian Journalist, by Robert Bledsoe. 10.3 (1999): 75-77.

– W. T. Stead: a Christ in Chicago. History. 3.3 (1992): 57-61.

Bazoft, Farzad: see Underwood 1.3.

BBC: see British Broadcasting Corporation.

Beaverbrook, Lord: see Edwards 3.4, 5.2.

Beech, Mark. Letter. 2.3 (1991): 66.

Beeston, Richard. Fall of the House of Hartwell. 7.2 (1996): 37-41.

Beeston, Richard: see Edwards 8.3.

Bell, Martin. Testament of an interventionist. 4.4 (1993): 8-11.

– TV news: how far should we go? 8.1 (1997): 7-16.

Bell, Martin: see Gowing 6.4.

Bell, Tim: see Tebbit 8.2

Benn, Tony: see Winstone 2.3.

Berlusconi, Silvio: see Frei 5.3.

Bermant, Chaim. Letter. 3.1 (1992): 62-63.

Bernstein, Carl: see Greengrass 7.1.

Bevins, Anthony. The Crippling of the Scribes. 1.2 (1990): 13-17.

– The weird world of Westminster leaks. 6.3 (1995): 7-11.

bias: see Barnett 1.3, 1.4; Editorial 2.2, 3.2; Finney 2.2; Franklin 10.1; Miller 4.1; Pope 10.1; see also general elections; press power.

bibliography, British press: see Boston 5.3

Billig, Michael: see Golding 3.2.

Bindman, Geoffrey. A shadow across press freedom. 2.1 (1990): 22-26.

– Justice fights back. Rev. of Make No Law: The Sullivan Case and the First Amendment, by Anthony Lewis. 3.3 (1992): 65-66.

– Little change in libel law. 7.3 (1996): 52-56.

– Scrap our ludicrous libel law. 5.4 (1994): 22-26

– The case for a Freedom of Expression Act. 5.1 (1994): 30-34.

biography: see Proops 4.1; Shepherd 8.1; Tebbit 8.2.

biographies: see books reviewed.

Black, Conrad. Interview: see Hagerty 9.2; Leapman 6.4, 7.2.

black and Asian journalists: see Ainley 5.4, 9.4, Arthur 10.2; see also ethnic issues.

Blom-Cooper, Louis. The last days of the Press Council. 2.3 (1991): 34-39.

– What we need for Britain's press. 10.1 (1999): 6-9.

Blundy, David: see Chester 2.2; Evans 1.3.

Bosnian War: see Bell 4.4, 8.1; Gowing 6.4, 8.4; Vulliamy 4.2.

Boston, Ray. 'A little fun and amusement... is my journalism.' 9.2 (1998): 48-52.

– 'All our sins remember'd.' Rev. of Studies in Newspaper and Periodical History (1994), ed. Michael Harris and Tom O'Malley. 8.1 (1997): 75-77.

– America and the English radicals. Rev. of Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual and Symbol in England, 1790-1850, by James A. Epstein. 7.1 (1996): 77-79.

– A rebel for all time. Rev. of Tom Paine; A Political Life, by John Keane. 6.2 (1995): 78-79.

– Fascinating but wrong-headed. Rev. of Toward a Working-Class Canon: Literary Criticism in British Working-Class Periodicals, 1816-1858, by Paul Thomas Murphy. 6.3 (1995): 63-66.

– Finding out about TIME. 4.3 (1993): 35-38.

– From inkwells to computers. Rev. of The Twentieth-Century Newspaper Press in Britain: an annotated bibliography, by David Linton. 5.3 (1994): 63-65.

– In homage to Mrs Curnow (and Alistair Cooke). 5.2 (1994): 41-45.

– Journalism without tears. Rev. of Journalism in the 21st Century, by Tom Koch. 3.3 (1992): 69-70.

– Letter. 4.1 (1993): 61-62.

– The amiable polymath. Rev. of Fun and Games with Alistair Cooke, foreword by Michael Parkinson. 6.1 (1995): 76-78.

– The beginning – and end – of Fleet Street. Picture Feature. 4.3 (1993): 27-30.

– The First of the Greats. Rev. of Hazlitt; A Life, by Stanley Jones. 1.2 (1990): 65-67.

– The first of the tabloids. 10.2 (1999): 63-68.

– The founding father of the Telegraph. 8.3 (1997): 51-56.

– The man who doctored the doctor. Rev. of William Camrose: Giant of Fleet Street, by his son Lord Hartwell. 3.4 (1992): 60-61.

– The rest is history – of a kind. Rev. of The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Information, by C. John Sommerville. 9.4 (1998): 76-80.

Bowring, Philip. Long march to press shackles? 6.1 (1995): 39-44.

Boyne, H. B. (Harry): see Harris 8.4.

Bradlaugh, Charles: see Whitehead 2.2.

Brand, John. Letter. 2.1 (1990): 59; 6.4 (1995): 80.

Bremner, Charles. If only they had parked on a route nationale. 5.1 (1994): 15-18.

British Broadcasting Corporation: see Aaronovitch 4.4; Barnett 5.4; Corera 10.2; Goodman (Editorial) 9.2, 10.3; Hall 4.1; Hendy 5.2; Hill 4.4, 8.2, 9.2, 10.2; Küng 9.2; Leapman 5.1; Malcolm 5.2; McCrystal 7.1; Reynolds 2.3; Stevens 4.3, 6.1, 9.4; Wenham 6.1; Whitehead 4.2; see also broadcasting statistics; radio; regulation.

British Library Newspaper Library: see Engel 6.4.

British press bibliography: see Boston 5.3.

broadcasting statistics: see Barnett, Factfile 1.1-5.2; Editorial 2.1; see also newspaper statistics.

Bromley, Michael, and Hugh Stephenson. Digging journalists out of holes. Research. 9.1 (1998): 59-66.

–, and Howard Tumber. The first cyberspace election. Research. 8.2 (1997): 68-74.

Brooks, Collin: see Baylen 10.4.

Brown, Gerry: see Connew 6.4.

Bruce, Brendan. Six arrows in the quiver. 3.1 (1992): 22-25.

Bruce, Brendan: see Underwood 3.2.

Brummer, Alex. The snares and snarls in the City's jungle. 7.4 (1996): 62-67.

Brunson, Michael. Delicious gossip of our political age. Rev. of As It Seemed To Me: Political Memoirs, by John Cole. 6.2 (1995): 71-73.

– Mr Jones's private war. Rev. of Campaign 1997, by Nicholas Jones. 8.3 (1997): 60-62.

Bull, George. A peculiar kind of genius. 9.1 (1998): 20-31.


C

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Calman, Mel. David Low - timeless cartoonist. 4.4 (1993): 31-33.

Cameron, Andrew. No miracles from this merger. 8.3 (1997): 36-39.

Campbell, Alastair. Lying makes news. 3.3 (1992) 12-15.

Campbell, Alastair: see Johnson 10.4; see also spin doctors.

Campbell, Duncan. The seductive embrace of the police. 5.1 (1994): 35-38.

Camrose, William: see Boston 3.4.

cartoons and caricature: see Baylen 7.1; Calman 4.4; Newton 9.4; Seymour-Ure 8.1.

Carvel, Robert: see Sloman 2.1.

Cass, Philip. Tuning into the coconut wireless. 10.4 (1999): 55-59.

censorship: see Currie 2.4; Datta-Ray 7.3; For censors' eyes only 6.2; Hill 5.2; Johnson 9.3; Miller 1.2; Neustatter 1.2; Petley 4.3.

Chadwick, Paul. Letter. 2.1 (1990): 57-58.

Channel 4: see Petley 1.4.

Charman, Frank: see Cudlipp 3.3.

Chester, Lewis. Footprints in Blundyland. Rev. of The Last Paragraph - The Journalism of David Blundy, ed. Anthony Holden. 2.2 (1990): 61-63.

Chorley, Henry Fothergill: see Baylen 10.3.

Christiansen, Arthur: see Cox 7.4.

circulation: see Leapman 10.4; Preston 2.2.

Clements, Richard. A salute to the two-headed horse. Rev. of The Bloody Circus, by Huw Richards. 8.4 (1997):74-77.

Clother, Henry. Training at the crossroads. 6.2 (1995): 56-59.

CNN: see Gaber 4.1; Rubenstein 3.1.

Cockburn, Patrick. Inside the tombed city. The Gulf. 2.3 (1991): 6-11.

Cold War: see Kirkhorn 2.1; Steele 10.3.

Cole, John. The Guardian angel. Rev. of Changing Faces: a history of the Guardian 1956-88, by Geoffrey Taylor. 4.2 (1993): 57-60.

Cole, John: see Brunson 6.2.

Cole, Peter. Are journalists born - or trained? 7.2 (1996): 42-48.

– Fall out on Sunday... Rev. of Paper Dreams, by Stephen Glover. 4.2 (1993): 54-56.

– The Aging of an Editor. 2.1 (1990): 6-10.

columnists: see Edwards 9.1; Waterhouse 6.3; Worsthorne 4.4.

Condon, Judith. The Maid and The Princess. 1.3 (1990): 42-47.

Connew, Paul. Writing for the mass market. Rev. of Exposed! Sensational True Story of Fleet St. Reporter, by Gerry Brown. 6.4 (1995): 72-74.

controversy column: see Aaronovitch 4.4; Greenslade 6.2; Heffer 5.1; Mayes 5.4; Stevens 4.3, 5.2, 5.3, 6.1, 6.3; Woffinden 7.4.

Cooke, Alistair: see Boston 5.2, 6.1.

Cooper, Zaki. Letter. 5.2 (1994): 60-61.

Corbett, Bernie. Letter. 2.4 (1991): 61-62.

Corera, Gordon. War on the air waves. 10.2 (1999): 7-15.

courts: see McConnell 7.3.

Cowley, Valerie. The customers' view of PR people. Research. 6.1 (1995): 64-69.

Cox, Geoffrey. The editor who made love - and great news. Memorable Editors. 7.3 (1996): 16-24.

– The gospel according to Christiansen. Memorable Editors. 7.4 (1996): 52-56.

Cox, Sir Geoffrey: see Goodman 6.4.

crime: see Campbell 5.1; Petley 6.3.

cross-media ownership: see Editorial 4.3; Goodman (Editorial) 5.4; Goodwin 6.1; Tusa 5.4; Seymour-Ure 10.3; see also globalisation; press power; technology.

Cudlipp, Hugh. A dynasty launched on a ha'penny. Rev. of Lords of Fleet Street: The Harmsworth Dynasty, by Richard Bourne. 2.3 (1991): 55-56.

– Cudlipp's Canons. 9.3 (1998): 21-29.

– Exclusive: the first nude in Fleet Street. 5.3 (1994): 17-19.

– 'Grumpy': the man who... Memorable Stories. 7.1 (1996): 12-19.

– Laughter in court. 3.2 (1992): 20-31.

– For Balliol read Blackpool. Memorable Stories. 6.2 (1995): 9-18.

– The camera cannot lie. 3.3 (1992): 30-35.

– The Deathbed Repentance' 1.2 (1990): 4-12.

– The godfather of the British tabloids. 8.2 (1997): 34-44.

– Whose finger on the voters? 7.4 (1996): 21-40.

Cudlipp, Hugh (Lord): see Goodman 9.3; Mullally 10.2; Pilger 9.3; Waterhouse 9.3.

Cudlipp, Lady Jodi. Letter. 10.1 (1999): 79.

Currie, Edwina. Time to end the laughter. Rev. of Dear Clare - This being what women feel about page three, by Clare Short MP. 2.4 (1991): 57-58.

Curtice, John. Supping with Rupert is not the answer, Mr Blair. Research. 7.4 (1996): 41-45.


D

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Daily Express: see Cox 7.4.

Daily Herald: see Clements 8.4.

Daily Mail: see English 7.2; MacArthur 9.3; Watts 9.3.

Daily Mirror: see Cudlipp 7.4, 8.2; Goodman 3.2, 9.3; Molloy 10.4; Pilger 9.3; Stott 10.1; Waterhouse 9.3; Zec 4.3.

Daily Telegraph: see Telegraph.

Daily Worker: see Morgan 6.3.

Daly, Macdonald. What Labour could do about the tabloids. 3.4 (1992): 29-33.

Datta-Ray, Sunanda K. Does a free press hinder progress? 7.3 (1996): 30-35.

– The perils of the Asian way. 5.4 (1994): 48-51.

– The Squeeze of India's Proffered Hand. 1.4 (1990): 33-38.

Day, Sir Robin: see Goodman 4.2.

Deacon, David. See Golding 3.2.

Deedes, William. The Buck Stops Here. 1.3 (1990): 7-10.

Deedes,W. F.: see Wheatcroft 9.1.

Defoe, Daniel: see Baylen 9.1.

Delano, Anthony. Chill Summer Down South. 1.2 (1990): 28-33.

– Our man in the land of 'Scoop'. Memorable Stories. 5.4 (1994): 16-21.

– Prepare for do-it-yourself news. 8.1 (1997): 53-56.

– The one to watch. 2.4 (1991): 41-45.

– The power of shorthand. 8.2 (1997): 59-63.

–, and John Henningham. A fin de siècle forecast. Research. 7.1 (1996): 55-61. See also Henningham 5.3.

Diana, Princess of Wales: see Greenslade 8.4; Lawrence 9.2.

Dickie, John: see Leapman 8.4.

diplomatic: see Leapman 8.4.

Doig, Alan. Retreat of the investigators. 3.4 (1992) 44-50.

Douglas, Lawrie. Newsrooms with no typewriters. 9.3 (1998): 43-48.

Dunblane massacre: see Linklater 7.2.

Duranty, Walter: see Kirkhorn 2.1.

Dyke, Greg. Why you, Mr Green? Rev. of Greenfinger: The rise of Michael Green and Carlton Communications, by Ray Snoddy. 7.4 (1996): 74-75.


E

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Eastern Europe: see Gaber 1.3; Lloyd 1.3.

editorials: A Moment for Truth. 2.2 (1990): 3-5.

– A Serious Business. Rev. of We British, by Eric Jacobs and Robert Worcester. 2.1 (1990): 4-5.

– Brutality sells, OK... 4.2 (1993): 3-4.

– Defenders of the faith. 3.2 (1992): 3-5.

– Mogul Madness. 3.1 (1992): 4-6.

– Power - and prejudice. 3.4 (1992): 3-4.

– The Frontiers of Tradition. 1.4 (1990): 2-3.

– The Media and the Commissar. 2.4 (1991): 3-4.

– The mogul tendency. 4.3 (1993): 3-4.

– The shadow of privacy law. 3.3 (1992): 3-4.

– The Sound of Change. 1.2 (1990): 2-3.

– The Tabs Defended. 1.3 (1990): 2-4.

– Too much to read? 4.1 (1993): 3-4.

– Truth hides in a desert bunker. 2.3 (1991): 3-5.

– Why We Are Here. 1.1 (1989): 2-6.

See also Goodman.

editing: see Forsyth 2.2.

editors: see Bull 9.1; Cox 7.3, 7.4; Goodman (Editorial) 6.4, 9.3; Linklater 5.3, 7.4; Littlejohn 5.1; McCrystal 7.4; Pilger 9.3; Pocock 7.2; Rusbridger 1.2; Stead 9.4; Waterhouse 9.3; Watts 9.3.

Edwards, Robert J. (Bob). All kinds of columns. Rev. of The Penguin Book of Columnists, ed. Christopher Silvester. 9.1 (1998): 67-70.

– 'It is possible to out-live a dormouse'... even in Fleet Street. Rev. of Secrets of the Press: Journalists on journalism, ed. Stephen Glover. 10.4 (1999): 72-74.

– Memoirs of a master critic. Rev. of Marilyn, Hitler and Me, by Milton Shulman. 9.3 (1998): 70-72.

– More an uncle than an ogre. Rev. of Michael Foot, by Mervyn Jones. 5.2 (1994): 54-56.

– Question: Who was Moses Levy? Rev. of Tickle the Public. One Hundred Years of the Popular Press, by Matthew Engel. 7.2 (1996): 69-71.

– 'Tell the story...' said Beaverbrook: and, by God, they did. Rev. of Looking For Trouble: The Life and Times of a Foreign Correspondent, by Richard Beeston, and A Trouser-wearing Character: The Life and Times of Nancy Spain, by Rose Collis. 8.3 (1997): 63-67.

– The Beaver: power... with an odour of genius. Rev. of BEAVERBROOK: A life, by Anne Chisholm and Michael Davie. 3.4 (1992): 51-53.

– The man with the constant smile - and savage bite. Rev. of A Particular Kind of Fool: an autobiography, by Noel Whitcomb. 2.3 (1991): 61-63.

– Touched By Madness. Rev. of The Rise and Fall of Fleet Street, by Charles Wintour. 1.1 (1989): 39-40.

Eisenberg, Dennis. A jaundiced view from Jerusalem. 4.4 (1993) 21-26.

Ellis, Andy. A novice gets his foot in the door. 5.2 (1994): 38-40.

Elphick, Robert. An expedition to Uruguay.' 7.2 (1996): 49-54.

employment: see O'Shaughnessy 9.4.

Engel, Matthew. An unmanageable surfeit of sport. 5.1 (1994): 19-22.

– Take the Northern Line to Colindale... 6.4 (1995): 21-25.

English, David. Legend of 'The Chief'. 7.2 (1996): 6-14.

– Letter. 2.1 (1990): 57.

English, Sir David: see Watts 9.3.

environment: see Anderson 4.2; Gaber 4.4; Longman 5.2; Worcester 4.3, 7.3.

espionage: see Gott 6.1; Hill 6.3; McCrystal 6.1.

ethics: see Hilsum 8.1; Leapman 4.3, 9.2; Linklater 9.4; Tatchell 9.2.

ethnic issues: see Knightley 10.2; Napoli 2.2; Pope 10.1.

European: see Armour 2.4.

European press: see Morgan 6.4.

European Union: see Bates 10.1; Morgan 6.4.

Evans, Harold. The Unwritten Paragraph. 1.3 (1990): 5-6.

Evans, Jean Silvan. Letter. 4.1 (1993) 59-60.

Evening Standard: see Wintour 7.1.

Express Newspapers: see Cameron 8.3; Hagerty 10.1.


F

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Fayed, Mohamed: see Maddox 10.1.

feminism: see Neustatter 1.2.

Fenby, Jonathan. From news to pork belly futures... Rev. of The Power of News: The History of Reuters, by Donald Read. 4.1 (1993): 51-53.

Fiddick, Peter. Monitoring the media. 4.2 (1993): 44-48.

financial: see Brummer 7.4; Hird 1.2.

Financial Times: see Bull 9.1.

Finney, Angus. The truth comes between the lines... Research. 2.2 (1990): 40-50.

Fireman, Bruce. Could tigers make light bulbs? Rev. of Paper Tigers, by Nicholas Coleridge. 4.3 (1993): 56-58.

Fleet Street: see Baylen 10.4; Boston 4.3; Goodman 1.3; Lewis 6.1; Mullally 10.1; Waterhouse 3.1, 6.4; Wheeler 4.2.

Flynn, Laurie. Private Collection. Five unpublished photographs by Bert Hardy. 1.1 (1989): 42-48.

– The artist as a camera. Rev. of W. Eugene Smith and the Photographic Essay, by Glenn G. Willumson. 4.1 (1993): 54-55.

Foot, Michael: see Edwards 5.2.

Foot, Paul. Strenuous liberty... a nervous revival? 2.4 (1991): 5-8.

– For censors' eyes only. 6.2 (1995): 35-39.

foreign correspondents: see Edwards 8.3; Hodgson 2.4; Steele 10.3.

Forsyth, John. I've got you taped... 2.2 (1990): 30-34.

Fowler, Neil. Alive and well in Wales. Response. 8.4 (1997): 61-65.

Frankland, Mark: see Steele 10.3.

Franklin, Bob. Education... education and, please, less prejudice. 10.1 (1999): 41-48.

– How local papers hold the ring. 3.4 (1992): 14-19.

– Letter. 5.3 (1994): 69-70.

– and Guri Larsen. Kingmaking in the Labour leadership contest. 5.4 (1994): 63-70.

Fraser, Nicholas. The Grand Design for I.T.N. 2.1 (1990): 17-21.

Freely, Maureen. Women on the warpath. Rev. of Splash, by Val Corbett, Joyce Hopkirk and Eve Pollard. 6.3 (1995): 60-62.

Frei, Matt. The long reach of Silvio Berlusconie. 5.3 (1994): 29-33.

French media: see Hodgson 9.2; Lewis 6.4, 7.3.

Fuller, Eve. Portrait of a local weekly. 10.3 (1999):34-40.


G

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Gaba, Dr. Martin. A campaign for more careful language. 5.2 (1994): 46-48.

– Keeping a foot in death's door. 2.3 (1991): 40-43.

– Letter. 7.2 (1996): 79-80.

Gaber, Ivor. A cold shoulder for the environment. Rev. of The Mass Media and Environmental Issues, ed. Anders Hansen. 4.4 (1993) 67-69.

– ITN's long fight for its extra 15 minutes. 5.1 (1994): 43-46.

– Media mist over the Third World. Rev. of Contra-flow in Global News: International and Regional News Exchange Mechanisms, by Oliver Boyd -Barrett and Daya Kishan Thussu. 3.4 (1992): 58-59.

– More spinned against than spinning? Rev. of Packaging Politics: Political Communications in Britain's Media Democracy, by Bob Franklin. 5.4 (1994): 78-79.

– Revolution - by Television. A Personal View on Romania. 1.3 (1990): 25-29.

– The College Green crowd. Rev. of Designer Politics: How elections are Won, by Margaret Scammell; Taxation and Representation: The media, political communications and the poll tax, by David Deacon and Peter Golding; Political Marketing and Communication, by Philippe Maarek; and Great Parliamentary Speeches: a collection of recordings, selected by Peter Hill. 6.3 (1995): 73-75.

– The new world of dogs and lamp-posts. 9.2 (1998): 59-65.

– Turner's world. Rev. of CNN World Report: Ted Turner's International News Coup, by Don M. Flournoy. 4.1 (1993): 56-58. See also Anderson 4.2, Phillips 7.3.

Gallagher, Jock. I'm as bitchy as any good reporter... 5.4 (1994): 31-34.

Guardian: see Hagerty 10.3; Rusbridger 8.1; Stead 9.4; Stevens 7.4.

general elections: see Barnett 3.2; Bromley 8.2; Brunson 8.3; Cudlipp 7.4; Curtice 7.4; Editorial 3.2; Franklin 3.4; Goodman (Editorial) 8.1, 8.2; Johnson 10.1; Jones 3.4; Kellner 3.3; Linton 7.2; Golding 3.2; MacArthur 3.2; Marr 8.2; Riddell 3.2; Tait 8.3; Williams 8.3; Worcester 3.3.

German media: see Kilborn 3.1.

Glendinning, Matthew. Is sports writing as sick as a parrot? 3.4 (1992): 34-39.

globalisation: see Armour 6.1; Gaber 3.4; Goodman (Editorial) 5.1, 9.2; Gurevitch 2.1; Lloyd 10.2; Tusa 5.4; see also.

Goff, Phil. A new dispensation to prevent prying. 4.1 (1993): 8-10.

Golding, Peter. Letter. 4.4 (1993): 70.

–, Michael Billig, David Deacon, and Sue Middleton. Two shows for the price of one. 3.2 (1992): 6-10.

Goldsworthy, Frank: see Johnson 8.2.

Goodman, Geoffrey. A shrinking globe. Editorial. 5.1 (1994): 3-5.

– A spin too far. Editorial. 8.4 (1997): 3-5.

– A Tribute to Sir Tom Hopkinson. 1.4 (1990): 42-45.

– An unhealthy partnership. Editorial. 9.1 (1998): 3-5.

– Another outing for the New Journalism. Editorial. 5.2 (1994): 3-5.

– Barbarians at the gate. Editorial. 10.3 (1999): 3-5.

– Can the BBC survive? Editorial. 9.2 (1998): 4-6.

– Citizen Corn. Editorial. 9.3 (1998): 3-5.

– Climate of fear. Editorial. 4.4 (1993): 3-4.

– Come up and interview me, sometime... Rev. of The Penguin book of interviews, ed. Christopher Silvester. 5.1 (1994): 63-64.

– Day of the internet - and the witches. Editorial. 9.4 (1998): 3-6.

– Day-light on power. Rev. of . . . But with Respect, by Sir Robin Day. 4.2 (1993): 61-62.

– Diplomat in a 'spaceship'. Interview with Michael Grade. 6.1 (1995): 23-27

– English... as she should be used. Rev. of English Our English, by Keith Waterhouse. 2.3 (1991): 64-65.

– Fallows's fallacies. Editorial. 7.2 (1996): 3-5.

– Flag of honour. Editorial. 7.3 (1996): 3-5.

– Holier than Gott? Editorial. 6.1 (1995): 3-5.

– How safe is the honeymoon? Editorial. 8.3 (1997): 3-5.

– Hugh, Lord Cudlipp. 9.3 (1998): 35-36.

– Infuriating, endearing and astoundingly honest. Rev. of Tricks of Memory, by Sir Peregrine Worsthorne. 4.4 (1993): 61-64.

– It's all fiction. Rev. of The Welsh Illusion, by Patrick Hannan. 10.1 (1999): 74-75.

– Maxwell's megalopolis. Rev. of Maxwell's Fall, by Roy Greenslade. 3.2 (1992): 57-58.

– Mirror on the Wall. Rev. of The Century, by Michael Molloy. 1.3 (1990): 53-54.

– No more BB's for breakfast? Editorial. 6.4 (1995): 3-5.

– Please pass the typewriter... Editorial. 7.1 (1996): 3-5.

– Power of the press? Editorial. 6.3 (1995): 3-6.

– Romanticism behind shattered dreams. Rev. of Baby in the Bathwater, by Gordon Schaffer. 7.3 (1996): 75-76.

– See you on the moon... Editorial. 10.4 (1999): 3-6.

– Ten years is not a long time... Editorial. 10.1 (1999): 3-5.

– Tesco-man in Farnham. Rev. of Townscape With Figures: Farnham - Portrait of an English Town, by Richard Hoggart. 5.3 (1994): 66-68.

– 'The architect of News at Ten.' Rev. of Pioneering Television News, by Sir Geoffrey Cox. 6.4 (1995): 75-76.

– The Blair revolution? Editorial. 8.2 (1997): 3-6.

– The courage to say: NO. 5.4 (1994): 3-4.

– The egos have landed. Editorial. 7.4 (1996): 3-5.

– The honourable mandarin. Rev. of Diverse Times, Sundry Places, by Sir Donald Maitland. 7.4 (1996): 78-79.

– The rainbow vision? Editorial. 5.3 (1994): 3-5.

– The reluctant crusader. Rev. of Personal History, by Katherine Graham. 8.3 (1997): 75-77.

– Too many truths. Editorial. 10.2 (1999): 3-6.

– When the sermons stop. Editorial. 6.2 (1995): 3-4.

– Which way will the Moguls jump? Editorial. 8.1 (1997): 3-6.

See also editorials.

Goodwin, Peter. A green light for the Moguls' Charter? 6.1 (1995): 45-50.

Gopsill, Tim. Letter. 1.3 (1990): 56-57.

Gosling, Juliet. Letter. 4.2 (1993): 66.

Gott, Richard. My side of the story. 6.1 (1995): 6-15.

Gott, Richard: see Goodman (Editorial) 6.1.

government information: see Aitken 2.4; Bruce 3.1; Elphick 7.2; Gaber 5.4; Goodman 7.4; Heffer 6.4; Ingham 7.3; Johnson 6.3; Jones 1.2, 2.4, 5.4; McCrystal 10.2; McGrenera 10.2; Riddell 5.1; Taylor 1.1; Underwood 3.1; see also information management; spin doctors.

Gowing, Nik. Supermarket - for the media in war. 8.4 (1997): 28-42.

– This reporter can never be a footnote... Rev. of In Harm's Way: Reflections of a War Zone Thug, by Martin Bell. 6.4 (1995): 67-71.

Grade, Michael. Michael Grade on Rupert Murdoch. Speech. 6.2 (1995) Insert.

Grade, Michael. Interview: see Goodman 6.1.

Graham, Jonathan. Letter. 9.2 (1998): 77-78.

Graham, Katherine: see Goodman 8.3.

Green, Michael: see Dyke 7.4.

Greengrass, Paul. Did they do a deal with Faust? Rev. of Deep Truth - The Lives of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, by Adrian Havill. 7.1 (1996): 65-68.

Greenslade, Roy. A job too many for Wakeham. Controversy Column. 6.2 (1995): 19-25.

– Carlton's glimpse of the future. 8.1 (1997): 40-49.

– Diana's death by a thousand cuttings. 8.4 (1997): 13-23.

– Fond memories of monochrome. 4.3 (1993): 5-8.

– How to turn a frog into a prince. 5.1 (1994): 23-29.

– Inside the web of lies and intrigue. Rev. of The Committee: Political Assassination in Northern Ireland, by Sean McPhilemy. 10.3 (1999): 66-70.

Greig, Gordon: see Aitken 7.1.

Griffiths, Dennis. A Woman's Work. 2.3 (1991): 50-54.

Guardian: see Cole 4.2.

Guerin, Veronica: see Goodman (Editorial) 7.3.

Gulf War: see Anderson 2.3; Cockburn 2.3; Editorial 2.3; Lustig 3.4; McCabe 2.3; Reynolds 2.3.

Gurevitch, Michael, and Mark Levy. The Global Newsroom. Research. 2.1 (1990): 27-37.


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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Hagerty, Bill. Citizen Clive. Interview with Lord Hollick. 10.1 (1999): 19-28.

'I don't do it for the money' - Rupert Murdoch. Interview with Rupert Murdoch. 10.4 (1999): 7-17.

– Life, politics, sex - and owning newspapers. Interview with Lord Rothermere. 8.4 (1997): 6.12.

– Live, topless and uncut. Rev. of L!ve TV: Tellybrats and Topless Darts, by Chris Horrie and Adam Nathan. 10.1 (1999): 72-73.

– More shoeshop than printshop. Rev. of The Fourth Estate, by Jeffrey Archer. 7.3 (1996): 71-74.

Nobody could make it up. Rev. of Flash! Splash! Crash! by Mike Maloney and William Hall. 7.4 (1996): 71-73.

– O'Reilly meanz more than beanz. Interview with Tony O'Reilly. 9.3 (1998): 12-20.

– Popping the Tabloid Myth. 2.2 (1990): 10-14.

– Showdown at the last chance saloon. 3.3 (1992): 26-29.

– Thank God it's Monday... Rev. of Deadline Sunday; A Life in the Week of the Sunday Times, by Brian MacArthur. 3.1 (1992): 55-57.

– The freelance kingmaker. Interview with Hugo Young. 10.3 (1999): 11-20.

– The Full Monty. Interview with David Montgomery. 9.4 (1998): 7.16.

– The hottest ticket in town. 8.1 (1997): 34-39.

– The view from Canary Wharf. Interview with Conrad Black. 9.2 (1998): 7-15.

– Where has all the laughter gone? Rev. of The Paper, dir.Ron Howard. 5.2 (1994): 28-31.

Hall, Tony. Parting of the ways? 4.1 (1993): 27-31.

Hamilton, Neil: see Rusbridger 8.1; Stevens 7.4.

Hanlin, Bruce. Letter. 4.4 (1993): 71-72.

Hannan, Patrick. In a far-off corner of our land... 6.4 (1995): 42-46.

– It's all about fiction - and selling papers. 3.4 (1992): 10-13.

– The real democratic deficit is... journalism in Wales. 8.2 (1997): 53-58.

Hardy, Bert: see Flynn 1.1.

Harper, Keith. The spiking of the strike reporters. 2.4 (1991): 32-36.

Harrabin, Roger. A tale of two fires. 9.3 (1998): 55-58.

Harris, David. The finest man I have known. 8.4 (1997): 24-27.

Hartwell, Lord: see Beeston 7.2.

Hastings, Max: see Leapman 6.4.

Haviland, Julian. The Man with his Mistress's Whistle... Rev. of Good and Faithful Servant; The Unauthorized Biography of Bernard Ingham, by Robert Harris. 2.2 (1990): 55-60.

Hayes, Nick. Letter. 3.2 (1992): 54-55.

Hazlitt, William: see Boston 1.2.

Head, Andrew. Alive and well in the provinces. Research. 6.2 (1995): 66-70.

Heath, Sir Edward: see Tucker 9.4.

Heffer, Simon. Self-restraint - or flea collars all round. Controversy Column. 5.1 (1994): 12-14.

– Spinning for a living... who cares? 6.4 (1995): 6-10.

Hendy, David.... but is it too fast for its own good? 5.2 (1994): 15-17.

Hennessy, Peter. Blessed Are... 'Our Own Correspondents'. 1.1 (1989): 22-24.

Henningham, John: see Delano 7.1.

–, and Anthony Delano. Talk about journalism...? Sorry, no comment. Research. 5.3 (1994): 58-62.

Herbert, Nicholas. Dangerous frenzy. 4.2 (1993): 36-39.

Heren, Louis: see Aitken 6.2.

Hetherington, Alastair: see Stead 9.4.

Hill, Peter. A whisker away from full-scale censorship. 5.2 (1994): 32-37.

– Bringing the dead back to life. 7.3 (1996): 11-15.

Newsmen on the net. 10.4 (1999): 26-31.

– Orwell, evacuees and unexploded bombs. 10.1 (1999): 60-68.

– Parliamentary broadcasting - from TWIW to YIP. 4.4 (1993): 39-44.

– Putting rubbish on the air. 10.2 (1999): 39-47.

– Sounds of the century. 8.2 (1997): 45-52.

– The BBC backs away from Parliament. 9.2 (1998): 16-22.

– The good old days in the Gallery. 7.1 (1996): 32-41.

– The spy who never was? Memorable Stories. 6.3 (1995): 38-47.

Hilsum, Lindsey. Crossing the line to commitment. 8.1 (1997): 29-33.

Hird, Christopher. The Money Men. Rev. of The Power of the Financial Press; Journalism and Economical Opinion in Britain and America, by Wayne Parsons. 1.2 (1990): 50-52.

history: see Baylen 3.3, 8.2, 10.3, 10.4; Boston 6.3, 7.1, 8.1, 9.4, 10.2; Edwards 7.2; Engel 6.4; Hill 8.2; McCaffrey 1.1; Molloy 10.4; Whitehead 2.2; Wintour 3.4.

Hodgson, Godfrey. A backsliding, backscratching élite. Rev. of Les nouveaux chiens de garde (The New Watchdogs), by Serge Halimi. 9.2 (1998): 71-73.

– A noble plaything. Rev. of David Astor and the Observer, by Richard Cockett. 3.2 (1992): 62-64.

– No longer the chosen people. Rev. of We Keep America on Top of the World: television journalism and the public sphere, by Daniel C. Hallin. 5.1 (1994): 57-59.

– Resident experts to flying deskmen. 2.4 (1991): 9-13.

– The choice: profits or professionalism. 8.3 (1997): 6-18.

The Independent: the product v. the dream. 5.3 (1994): 6-12.

Hoggart, Richard. Lantern on the stern. 3.3 (1992): 43-46.

– Onward - or back? - to basics. 5.2 (1994): 24-27.

Hollick, Clive. Interview: see Hagerty 10.1.

Hollingsworth, Mark. Eating-out with J. J. Rev. of Memoirs: Listening For A Midnight Tram, by Sir John Junor. 2.2 (1990): 64-65.

– The hazardous hunt for Mark's millions. 6.3 (1995): 16-21.

Holme, Christopher. The reporter at Guernica. 6.2 (1995): 46-51.

Hong Kong: see Bowring 6.1.

Hooper, David. The arbitrary libel law. Rev. of Grotesque Libels, by Adam Raphael. 4.2 (1993):63-65.

Hopkins, Paul M. S. Letter. 1.2 (1990): 71.

Hopkinson, Sir Tom: see Goodman 1.4.

Horgan, John. The life of O'Reilly. 9.2 (1998): 29-34.

Howard, Anthony. A very versatile Welshman. Rev. of John Morgan's Wales: A Personal Anthology. 4.4 (1993): 65-66.

Hulls, Brian: see Underwood 1.3.

human rights bill: see Tierney 9.2.

Hungarian press: see Kilborn 4.3.

Hunter, Fred. Letter. 7.4 (1996): 80.

Hussey, Marmaduke: see McCrystal 7.1.


I

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Iglesias, Graciela. An Argentine look at Ulster coverage. 3.1 (1992): 42-46.

Independent: see Cole 4.2; Hodgson 5.3; Johnson 1.3.

Independent Television: see Tremayne 4.3; see also regulation.

Independent Television News: see Fraser 2.1; Gaber 5.1; Goodman 6.4; see also regulation.

Indian media: see Datta-Ray 1.4, 5.4; Lewis 8.3.

industrial: see Harper 2.4; Routledge 6.2; Stevens 8.4.

information management: see McCaffrey 1.1; Tumber 4.1.

Ingham, Bernard. It's the message that matters. 7.3 (1996): 6-10.

Ingham, Sir Bernard: see Aitken 2.4; Haviland 2.2.

Internet: see Douglas 9.3; Hill 10.4; Seymour-Ure 6.4; see also technology.

interviewing: see Goodman 5.1; Tusa 6.2.

interviews: see Goodman 6.1; Hagerty 8.4, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4, 10.1, 10.3, 10.4.

investigative journalism: see Doig 3.4; Greengrass 7.1; Knightley 9.2; Lashmar 3.4, 4.1; Linklater 4.2; Northmore 5.1; Page 9.1; Young 2.1.

Irish press: see Horgan 9.2.

Isaaman, Gerald. Must local papers continue to languish? 5.1 (1994): 39-42.

– Nosey-parkers will always survive. Rev. of Making The Local News: Local Journalism in context, ed. Bob Franklin and David Murphy. 9.4 (1998): 71-73.

Israel: see Eisenberg 4.4.

Italian broadcasting: see Frei 5.3.

ITN: see Independent Television News.

ITV: see Independent Television.


J

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Jacobson, Colin. Images from far away stars. Rev. of Young Meteors: British Photojournalism 1957-65, by Martin Harrison. 9.4 (1998): 74-75.

Japan: see Mayes 7.2, Taniguchi 10.2.

Jenner, Brian. Is it too late to do something else? 10.3 (1999): 55-59.

Jewish Chronicle: see Baylen 5.2.

Johnson, Frank. Horror in the House of Toffs. Rev. of The House the Berrys Built - Inside the Telegraph 1928-1986, by Duff Hart-Davis, and Not Many Dead - Journal of a Year in Fleet Street, by Nicholas Garland. 1.3 (1990): 48-52.

Johnson, Johnnie. Royalty and roués equally welcome. 7.1 (1996): 51-54.

– 'Upslows' in the middle-east. Rev. of Want You Soonest: Memoirs of a War Correspondent, by Frank Goldsworthy. 8.2 (1997): 77-78.

Johnson, Joy. A threat to open debate. 8.1 (1997): 68-71.

– Biting the hand that spins. Rev. of Soundbites and Spin Doctors, by Nicholas Jones. 6.3 (1995): 67-69.

– Censors in the undergrowth. 9.3 (1998): 49-54.

– Everything but the message. Rev. of Political Marketing and Communication, by Phillippe Maarek. 8.3 (1997): 71-74.

– Rupert's grip? The Blair-Murdoch Connection. 9.1 (1998): 13-19.

– Second most powerful man in Britain? Rev. of Alastair Campbell: New Labour and the Rise of the Media Class, by Peter Oborne. 10.4 (1999): 67-71.

– Watch out for the Downing Street Daimlers. Rev. of Why Labour won the General Election in 1997, ed. Ivor Crew, Brian Gosschalk and John Bartle. 10.1 (1999): 76-78.

Jones, Mervyn. Harlots and prerogatives. The Blair-Murdoch Connection. 9.1 (1998): 6-12.

Jones, Nicholas. Mr Smith comes to town. 3.4 (1992): 24-28.

– Taming the spin doctors. 5.4 (1994): 27-30.

– Tension at Ten. 2.4 (1991): 19-23.

– The 'Spin-Doctors' In Battle. 1.2 (1990): 23-27.

journalism as career: see Edwards 10.4; Jenner 10.3; O'Shaughnessy 9.4; Palling 10.3; see also black and Asian journalists.

journalist characteristics: see Delano 7.1; Henningham 5.3; Tunstall 6.3.

Junor, Sir John: see Hollingsworth 2.2.


K

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Kaiser, Robert G. The downward view from Olympus... 8.2 (1997): 18-25.

Kareithi, Peter. It Gets My Goat... 1.3 (1990): 30-32.

Keeble, Richard. A Balkan birthday for NATO. 10.2 (1999): 16-20.

– The re-writing of Raisa. 3.3 (1992): 40-42.

Kellner, Peter. Defeat - of the pollsters. 3.3 (1992): 5-11.

– Spiral of truth? 7.1 (1996): 20-27.

Kemp, Arnold. Fighting the tartan price war. 5.4 (1994): 11-15.

Kilborn, Richard. Troubled times for the Magyar media. 4.3 (1993): 20-23.

– Soap springs eternal... 4.4 (1993): 34-38.

– Unified Germany's media Anschluss. 3.1 (1992): 29-33.

Kirkhorn, Michael J. Frontier of Lies. Rev. of Stalin's Apologist, Walter Duranty: The New York Times's Man in Moscow, by S. J. Taylor. 2.1 (1990): 53-55.

– 'The Huggable Newspaper' - The Virtuous Journalist. 1.4 (1990): 4-24.

Knight, Andrew. Snoddy in Sun-land. Rev. of The Good, The Bad, and the Unacceptable, by Raymond Snoddy. 3.2 (1992): 68-71.

Knight, Robin. Another blow to the special relationship. 7.4 (1996): 15-20.

Knightley, Phillip. Access to death. 7.1 (1996): 6-11.

– The cheerleaders of World War II. 6.2 (1995): 40-45.

– The inside story of Philby's exposure. Response. 9.2 (1998): 35-40.

– The Loneliness of the Long-distance Lens. Rev. of Unreasonable Behaviour: an autobiography, by Donald McCullin with Lewis Chester. 2.1 (1990): 49-52.

– The myth of the ethnic minority. Rev. of The Media of Conflict: war reporting and representation of ethnic violence, ed. Tim Allen and Jean Seaton. 10.2 (1999): 69-71.

Kosovo: see Corera 10.2; Goodman (Editorial) 10.2; Keeble 10.2; Watson 10.3.

Küng, Lucy. Broadcasting in the cocktail shaker. Research. 9.2 (1998): 41-47.


L

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Labour Party: see Clements 8.3; Franklin 5.4; Jones 3.4.

Lacey, Colin: see Longman 5.2.

Lamb, Sir Larry: see Rusbridger 1.2.

Langdon, Julia. Hunting with Bob Maxwell. Memorable Stories. 6.1 (1995): 51-55.

Larsen, Guri: see Franklin 5.4.

Lashmar, Paul. A fraudster's charter. 3.4 (1992): 40-43.

– Outsiders - in from the cold. 4.1 (1993): 32-36.

Lawrence, D. H.: see Maddox 8.3.

Lawrence, Margot. Letter. 9.2 (1998): 78-80.

leaking: see Bevins 6.3.

Leapman, Michael. A decade of withered hopes. 10.4 (1999): 18-25.

– BBC: no options left? Rev. of Fuzzy Monsters - Fear and Loathing at the BBC, by Chris Horrie and Steve Clarke. 5.1 (1994): 60-62.

– Blustering Black. Rev. of Shades of Black: Conrad Black and the world's fastest-growing press empire, by Richard Siklos. 7.2 (1996): 72-75.

– Connoisseur of the crème caramel. Rev. of The Boys on the Bongo Bus: the media and travelling diplomacy, by John Dickie. 8.4 (1997): 78-80.

– For whom the cliché tolls. 3.4 (1992) 20-23.

– Letter. 8.3 (1997): 80.

– Max and Conrad drift apart. 6.4 (1995): 11-15.

– Spin doesn't always work. Rev. of US Official Propaganda During the Vietnam War, 1965-1973: The Limits of Persuasion, by Caroline Page. 7.4 (1996): 76-77.

The Daily Telegraph. Out of focus? 2.4 (1991): 37-40.

– The misanthropic media gurus. Rev. of Ethical Issues in Journalism and the Media, ed. Andrew Belsey and Ruth Chadwick. 4.3 (1993): 54-55.

– The movie was more fun. Rev. of Media Ethics, ed. Matthew Kieran. 9.2 (1998): 74-76.

– What comes after the 'but...'? Rev. of Rupert Murdoch, by William Shawcross. 3.3 (1992): 62-64.

Leigh, David. Letter. 2.1 (1990): 57.

Lessing, Doris. Never the Whole Truth? 1.2 (1990): 18-22.

letters to the editor: see Aitchison 5.3; Beech 2.3; Bermant; Boston 4.1; Brand 2.1, 6.4; Chadwick 2.1; Cooper 5.2; Corbett 2.4; Cudlipp (Lady Jodi) 10.1; English 2.1; Evans 4.1; Franklin 5.3; Gaba 7.2; Golding 4.4; Gopsill 1.3; Gosling 4.2; Graham 9.2; Hayes 3.2; Hopkins 1.2; Hunter 7.4; Lawrence 9.2; Leapman 8.3; Leigh 2.1; Linton 4.4; Mason 1.3, 2.1, 2.3; Mayes 8.2, 10.3; Merrill 1.2, 2.2, 2.4, 5.3; Meth 2.2; Miller 3.2; Mitchell 8.1; Nessheim 9.3; Owen 1.4, 3.3, 4.1, 5.1, 5.2; Pascoe 4.2, 5.1, 10.1; Petley 4.4, 9.3; Pollard 2.3; Robinson 8.1; Schaffer 1.2; Shepherd 3.2, 4.1, 5.1; Silver 1.4; Stern 10.2; Stevens 8.2; Thomas 6.1; Topping 3.1; Torode 6.2; Trelford 1.3; Weiland 6.1; Winston 4.4; Worcester 3.4, 8.3.

Levy, Joseph Moses: see Boston 8.3.

Levy, Mark: see Gurevitch 2.1.

Lewis, Barbara. Adrift on the Isle of Dogs. 6.1 (1995): 56-59.

– Alors! – Mururoa makes news. 6.4 (1995): 53-57.

– India grapples with the Murdoch phenomenon. 8.3 (1997): 40-45.

– Self-censorship by French scribblers. 7.3 (1996): 36-41.

Lewis, Jane. Magazines show newspapers a clean pair of heels. Research. 5.1 (1994): 52-56.

libel: see Bindman 3.3, 5.4, 7.3; Bremner 5.1; Hooper 4.2; Proudler 8.3; Rubenstein 3.3; Rushbridger 8.1, 8.3; Stevens 7.4.

Linklater, Magnus. A painful parting of the ways. 5.3 (1994): 13-16.

– An insight into Insight. 4.2 (1993): 17-20.

– Can public trust be regained? 9.4 (1998): 49-55.

– Citizen Murdoch. Rev. of Citizen Murdoch, by Thomas Kiernan. 1.1 (1989): 34-36.

– The menace of Calcutt - and MacKenzie. 4.1 (1993): 5-7.

– The rampant outsider. Rev. of MURDOCH: The Decline of an Empire, by Michael Belfield, Christopher Hird and Sharon Kelly. 3.2 (1992): 59-61.

– The shadow across Neil's legacy. Rev. of Full Disclosure, by Andrew Neil. 7.4 (1996): 68-70.

– The tycoon who was never an observer. Rev. of Tiny Rowland - a rebel tycoon, by Tom Bower. 4.3 (1993): 51-53.

– Why Dunblane was different. 7.2 (1996): 15-19.

Linton, David. Letter. 4.4 (1993): 72.

– The Observer - in profile. Rev. of The Observer Observed, ed. Joanna Anstey and John Silverlight, and The Observer Book of Profiles, ed. Robert Low. 2.4 (1991): 59-60.

Linton, Martin. Maybe The Sun won it after all. 7.2 (1996): 20-26.

Littlejohn, Richard. Sun-set... at Wapping. 5.1 (1994): 9-11.

Littlejohn, Richard: see Worsthorne 7.1.

Live TV: see Hagerty 10.1.

Lloyd, John. New life for the old lady? 7.2 (1996): 27-30.

– Out of the Darkness. The press in Eastern Europe. 1.3 (1990): 20-24.

– Tomorrow the story will be - 'global everything'. 10.2 (1999): 21-25.

local newspapers: see Fuller 10.3; Head 6.2; Issaman 5.1, 9.4; Moore 5.3; Petley 3.3; Prichard 4.4; Ray 4.1.

London Press Club: see Johnson 7.1.

Longman, David, and Colin Lacey. Despatches from the doze-zone. Research. 5.2 (1994): 49-53.

Lorant, Stefan: see McCabe 2.2.

Low, David: see Calman 4.4.

Lustig, Robin. Beyond the limits of print. Rev. of Days of Rage, Beirut 1982-85. Photographs by Judah Passow. 7.1 (1996): 71-73.

– Guts galore: but where was the blood? Rev. of Smokescreen: The Media, The Censors, The Gulf, by Alex Thomson. 3.4 (1992): 54-55.

– Promises Are No Longer Enough. 1.2 (1990): 44-49.

– Who sets the agenda - politicians or journalists? 7.4 (1996): 6-10.

Lynch, Jake. Listening to the outsiders. 9.3 (1998): 64-69.


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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

MacArthur, Brian. A cut-price year. Factfile. 5.1 (1994): 70-72.

– A growing appetite for words? Factfile. 4.1 (1993): 63-66.

– Are the tabloids slipping? Factfile. 2.3 (1991): 68-70.

– Brian MacArthur On The Press. Factfile. 1.2 (1990): 72-74.

– Debris of a price war. Factfile. 5.2 (1994): 64-67.

– From sound bites to news snacks. Factfile. 4.2 (1993): 67-68.

– Sun-shine for the Tories. Factfile. 3.2 (1992): 74-77.

– The British keep reading despite the box. Factfile. 3.4 (1992): 65-67.

– The Harmsworths - a dynasty survives. Rev. of The Reluctant Press Lord; Esmond Rothermere and the Daily Mail, by S. J. Taylor. 9.3 (1998): 73-75.

– The makings of a memorable year. Factfile. 4.4 (1993): 75-77.

– The nationals continue to slide. Factfile. 4.3 (1993): 62-65.

– The news is not all bad. 3.3 (1992): 74-76.

– The Press. Factfile. 1.3 (1990): 58-62; 1.4 (1990): 68-71; 2.1 (1990): 63-67; 2.2 (1990): 75-80.

– The press and the parties. Factfile. 3.1 (1992): 64-66.

– Value for money holds the readers. Factfile. 2.4 (1991): 63-65.

MacKenzie, Kelvin: see Linklater 4.1; Littlejohn 5.1; Shrimsley 2.2.

McCabe, Eamonn. Days Of Happy Snaps. Rev. of Grace Robertson; Photojournalist of the 50's. 1.2 (1990): 55-61.

– Life - after Death. Rev. of The Blitz - The photographs of George Rodger. 2.1 (1990): 42-48.

– Photographers in the front line. Rev. of War Photography, Realism in the Press, by John Taylor. 3.1 (1992): 34-35

– The Camera is not a Gun. 1.4 (1990): 44-49.

– The electronic lie-machine? 2.4 (1991): 24-26.

– The end of the front page. 8.1 (1997): 50-52.

– The Lorant Revolution. 2.2 (1990): 51-54.

– The stuff of nightmares. 2.3 (1991): 23-26.

– The War Camera Goes on Leave. 1.3 (1990): 33-41.

McCaffrey, Sir Tom. The Man Who Leaked To Hitler. Rev. of Twilight of Truth, by Richard Cockett. 1.1 (1989): 37-39.

McConnell, Brian. Ask Prudence before going to law. 7.3 (1996): 57-61.

– Don't publish - and still be damned. 9.3 (1998): 59-63.

– James Bulger - victim of a legend? 5.4 (1994): 60-62.

– Keeping the law at arm's length. Rev. of Privacy and Press Freedom, by Raymond Wacks. 6.4 (1995): 77-79.

– Poles apart on privacy. 7.2 (1996): 63-68.

McCrystal, Cal. From Cahal to Cal in bigoted Belfast. 8.4 (1997): 50-60.

– Laying traps for the younger readers. 6.3 (1995): 27-32.

– Machiavelli of Portland Place. 7.1 (1996): 42-46.

– Making a living from the shadows. Rev. of Defending the Realm: MI5 and the Shayler Affair, by Mark Hollingsworth and Nick Fielding. 10.4 (1999): 75-77.

– 007 calling... 6.1 (1995): 16-22.

– Should we stop the muckspreading? 6.2 (1995): 26-31.

– The sub-secret underworld of the D-Notice business. 10.2 (1999): 26-33.

– Would you go over the cliff for your editor? 7.4 (1996): 57-61.

McCullin, Don: see McCabe 1.3, Knightley 2.1.

McGregor, Judy. Spin and the Scottish devolution poll. Research. 10.4 (1999): 60-66.

McGrenera, Terry. Bring in the cameras. Rev. of Sultans of Spin: The Media and the New Labour Government, by Nicholas Jones. 10.2 (1999): 74-76.

McManus, Jason. Cracks in the crusade. 3.2 (1992): 36-41.

Maddox, Brenda. Dodi's devious dad. Rev. of Fayed: The Unauthorized Biography, by Tom Bower. 10.1 (1999): 69-71.

– How trustworthy is television? 10.2 (1999): 34-38.

– Lawrence the journalist. 8.3 (1997): 46-50.

magazines: see Baylen 10.2; Boston 9.2; Lewis 5.1; Purden 9.3.

Maitland, Sir Donald: see Goodman 7.4.

Major, John: see Ramsden 5.4.

Malaysia: see Stevens 5.2.

Malcolm, Robin. Re-inventing the wheel... 5.2 (1994): 18-20.

Maloney, Mike: see Hagerty 7.4.

Manchester: see Tremayne 6.3.

Mandelson, Peter: see Powell 10.2.

Mann, Julian. Muggeridge - overdue for a 'Life'. 4.3 (1993): 31-34.

Mansfield, Michael. Being seen to be done... 6.1 (1995): 60-63.

Marr, Andrew. The night we nearly ran out of paper. 8.2 (1997): 7-14.

Mason, Keith. Letter. 1.3 (1990): 55-56; 2.1 (1990): 58-59; 2.3 (1991): 66-67.

Mathias, Glyn. Competing with impartiality. 4.1 (1993): 16-17.

– Putting the House on the Box. 2.3 (1991): 27-33.

Maxwell, Robert: see Goodman 3.2; Langdon 6.1.

Mayes, Tessa. Operation Overboard: D-Day media tedia. Controversy Column. 5.4 (1994): 52-55.

– Letter. 8.2 (1997): 79-80; 10.3 (1999): 78-79.

–, and Megan Rowling. Why Japan is still inscrutable. 7.2 (1996): 55-62.

Mellor, David: see Campbell 3.3; Hagerty 3.3.

memoirs: see Boston 4.3; Brunson 6.2; Connew 6.4; Cox 7.3; Cudlipp 3.2, 6.2, 7.1, 9.3; Delano 5.4; Edwards 9.3, 10.4; Gallagher 5.4; Goodman 10.1; Hagerty 3.3, 7.4; Hill 6.3; Hoggart 5.2; Hollingsworth 2.2; Johnson 8.2; Langdon 6.1; Mullally 10.1, 10.2; Oakley 5.2; Parkinson 3.3; Proops 5.3; Tyler 3.2; see also books reviewed.

Merril, Eric. Letter. 1.2 (1990): 71; 2.2 (1990): 70; 2.4 (1991): 62; 5.3 (1994): 70-71.

Meth, Monty. Letter. 2.2 (1990): 70-71.

MI5: see McCrystal 10.4; see also Cold War; espionage.

Middleton, Sue: see Golding 3.2.

Miller, David. The Beeb at bay. 4.1 (1993): 20-26.

– The History Behind a Mistake. 1.2 (1990): 34-43.

Miller, Jonathan. Letter. 3.2 (1992): 54.

Milne, Alasdair. Broadcasting in Crisis? 1.1 (1989): 25-28.

Mirror Group Newspapers: see Molloy 10.4; see also Daily Mirror.

Mitchell, Austin. Letter. 8.1 (1997): 78-79.

Molloy, Michael. We could have stopped Maxwell. 10.4 (1999): 32-54.

Molloy, Michael: see Goodman 1.3.

Montgomery, David. Interview: see Hagerty 9.4; see also Stott 10.1.

Moore, Christopher. Western Samoa's first journalist - and his successors. 5.3 (1994): 46-51.

moral panics: see Woffinden 7.4.

Morgan, David. Brussels through a distorting lens. Research. 6.4 (1995): 58-66.

Morgan, John: see Howard 4.4.

Morgan, Kevin. The miracle that failed. 6.3 (1995): 48-53.

Morning Star: see Morgan 6.3.

Morris, Marcus: see Purden 9.3.

Muggeridge, Malcolm: see Mann 4.3.

Mullally, Frederic. Crown Prince Cudlipp. 10.2 (1999): 48-51.

– Fleet Street in the forties. 10.1 (1999): 49-55.

Murdoch, Rupert: see Grade 6.2 (insert); Hagerty 10.4; Johnson 9.1; Jones 9.1; Leapman 3.3; Lewis 8.3; Linklater 1.1, 3.2; McCrystal 7.1; Potter 4.2; Snoddy 4.4.

myths: see McConnell 5.4.


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Napoli, James J., and Luanne R. Napoli. The Ethnic Voice: Heard, even seen... but only rarely read. 2.2 (1990): 22-29.

national press: see Boston 5.3; Seymour-Ure 7.2.

National Union of Journalists: see Foot 2.4; O'Shaughnessy 9.4.

NATO: see Kosovo.

Neil, Andrew: see Goodman (Editorial) 7.4; Linklater 7.4.

Nessheim, Dr Ragnhild V. Letter. 9.3 (1998): 79-80.

Neustatter, Angela. Can Censorship Beat Porno? Rev. of 1968-1978-1988- From Women's Liberation to Feminism, by Amanda Sebastyn, and Feminism and Censorship, by Julienne Dickey and Gail Chester. 1.2 (1990): 67-69.

New Journalism: see Goodman 5.2.

New Labour: see Gaber 9.2.

New Statesman: see Lloyd 7.2.

Newnes, George: see Boston 9.2.

News Chronicle: see Cox 7.3.

news values: see Harrabin 9.3, Keeble 3.3.

newspaper statistics: see MacArthur, Factfile 1.2-5.2; Editorial 2.1; see also broadcasting statistics.

Newton, Sir Gordon: see Bull 9.1.

Newton, Jane. Andy Capp joins Colonel Blimp. 9.4 (1998): 41-48.

Nicholas, Mary Ann. The awkward genius. Rev. of The Real Story of Picture Post, by Michael Hallen. 6.1 (1995): 72-75.

Nicol, Andrew. The boundaries of law - and press freedom. The Sanders judgement. 6.4 (1995):47-52.

Northcliffe, Lord: see English 7.2.

Northern Ireland: see Greenslade 10.3; Iglesias 3.1; McCrystal 8.4.

Northmore, David. Knowing where to look. 5.1 (1994): 47-51.

NUJ: see National Union of Journalists.


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Oakley, Chris. From green corduroy to media millionaire. 5.2 (1994): 6-9.

obituary: see Hill 7.3.

Observer: see Linklater 4.3; Linton 2.4; Hodgson 3.2.

Omond, Roger. Watchdog or poodle. 3.2 (1992): 47-53.

O'Reilly, Tony. Interview: see Hagerty 9.3; see also Horgan 9.2.

Orwell, George: see Hill 10.1, 10.2; Mullally 10.1.

O'Shaughnessy, Hugh. Maybe we have a future after all. 9.4 (1998): 56-59.

Owen, Frank: see Pocock 7.2.

Owen, Oliver. Letter. 1.4 (1990): 57; 3.3 (1992): 71; 4.1 (1993): 60; 5.1 (1994): 66; 5.2 (1994): 60.


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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Pacific media: see Cass 10.4.

PCC: see Press Complaints Commission.

Page, Bruce. A defence of 'low' journalism. 9.1 (1998): 45-58.

Paine, Tom: see Boston 6.2.

Palling, Bruce. Not a job for the over-forties. 10.3 (1999): 60-65.

Parkinson, Michael. Barnsley's Bogart. 3.3 (1992): 36-39.

parliament: see Gaber 6.3; Hill 4.4, 7.1, 9.2; Johnson 8.3; Mathias 2.3; Riddell 10.3; Roth 10.3; Straw 4.4, 10.1.

Pascoe, Janet. Letter. 4.2 (1993): 66; 5.1 (1994): 65; 10.1 (1999) 79.

Passow, Judah: see Lustig 7.1.

Petley, Julian. Almost anyone can be a censor. Rev. of Censorship, by Christian Woolmar. 4.3 (1993): 59-61.

– Channel Rescue. Rev. of Storm Over 4 - A Personal Account, by Jeremy Isaccs. 1.4 (1990): 54-56.

– How crime is not reported. Rev. of Reporting Crime: the Media Politics of Criminal Justice, by Philip Schlesinger and Howard Tumbler. 6.3 (1995): 70-72.

– In defence of 'video nasties'. 5.3 (1994): 52-57.

– Letter. 4.4 (1993): 71, 9.3 (1998): 80.

– No redress from the PCC. 8.4 (1997): 66-73.

– Trouble at the local. Rev. of What News? The Market, Politics and the Local Press, by Bob Franklin and David Murphy. 3.3 (1992): 67-68.

Phillips, Angela, and Ivor Gaber. The case for media degrees. Response. 7.3 (1996): 62-65.

Philo, Greg. Seeing IS Believing. Research. 1.4 (1990): 58-64.

photojournalism: see Boston 4.3; Cudlipp 3.3; Flynn 1.1, 4.1; For censors' eyes only 6.2; Greenslade 5.1; Hagerty 7.4; Jacobson 9.4; Knightley 2.1, 7.1; Lustig 7.1; McCabe 1.2 , 1.3, 1.4, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 3.1, 8.1.

Picture Post: see Goodman 1.4; McCabe 2.2; Nicholas 6.1.

Pilger, John. Hugh, Lord Cudlipp. 9.3 (1998): 32-35.

Pocock, Tom. 'Life's a dustbin, young Tom...' Memorable Editors. 7.2 (1996): 31-36.

police: see Campbell 5.1; Silverman 3.2.

political: see Editorial 3.2; Gaber 6.3; Goodman 7.3; Johnson 8.1; Jones 2.4; Lustig 7.4; McGregor 10.4; Richards 6.2; Seymour-Ure 6.4.

Pollard, Eve. Letter. 2.3 (1991): 67.

Pope, Steve. The ignorance of Middle England. 10.1 (1999): 56-59.

Potter, Dennis. A malediction on Murdoch - and his imitators. 4.2 (1993): 21-26.

Powell, Charles. Fresh light on the fallen angel. Rev. of Mandelson: the Biography, by Donald Macintyre. 10.2 (1999): 72-73.

Press Complaints Commission: see Blom-Cooper 10.1; Bromley 9.1; Greenslade 6.2; Linklater 9.4; Petley 8.4; Wakeham 9.4; Walker 9.1, Wilson 6.4; see also press freedom; privacy.

Press Council: see Blom-Cooper 2.3.

press freedom: see Bindman 2.1; Cass 10.4; Herbert 4.2; Nicol 6.4.

press power: see Baylen 8.2; Goodman (Editorial) 6.3, 8.3, 9.1; Edwards 3.4; Fenby 4.1; Hird 1.2; Johnson 9.1; Jones 9.1; Seymour-Ure 7.2, 10.3; see also bias; cross-media ownership; general elections.

press secretaries: see Aitken 2.4; Haviland 2.2; Ingham 7.3; Johnson 10.4; see also spin doctors.

Preston, Peter. Tyranny of the Copy-cat. 2.2 (1990): 6-9.

price war: see Stevens 4.4.

Prichard, Craig. The cuddlies and junkies wrestle for the regionals. Research. 4.4 (1993): 55-58.

privacy: see Bindman 5.1; Deedes 1.3; Editorial 3.3; Goff 4.1; Goodman 6.2; Hannan 3.4; Linklater 4.1; McConnell 6.4, .7.2; Proops 4.1.

Proops, Marje. The Agony behind the Helping Phrase. 1.4 (1990): 25-27.

– The unfamiliar image in the mirror. 4.1 (1993): 11-15.

– When Harold huffed and puffed... Memorable Stories. 5.3 (1994): 24-28.

propaganda: see Knightley 6.2; Leapman 7.4.

proprietors: see Baistow 2.3; Baylen 10.4; Beeston 7.2; Bevins 1.2; Boston 3.4; Cudlipp 1.2, 2.3; Editorial 3.1; Edwards 1.1, 3.4; Fireman 4.3; Goodman 3.2, 8.3; Grade 6.2 (insert); Hagerty 8.4, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4, 10.1, 10.4; Hodgson 3.2; Leapman 3.3, 7.2; Lewis 8.3; Linklater 1.1, 3.2; Seymour-Ure 10.3.

Proudler, Geraldine. Libel law in the dock. 8.3 (1997): 31-35.

psephology: see Kellner 3.3, 7.1; Worcester 2.4, 3.4.

public relations: see Campbell 3.3; Cowley 6.1; Simpson 1.4; Tebbit 8.2; Underwood 3.2.

Purden, Laurie. The unpredictable priest-in-charge. Rev. of Living with Eagles, by Sally Morris and Jan Hallwood. 9.3 (1998): 76-78.


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None


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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

radio: see Douglas 9.3; Hendy 5.2; Malcolm 5.2; Reynolds 2.3; 5.2; Stevens 6.1; Twisk 5.3.

Radio 5 Live: see Reynolds 5.2; Twisk 5.3.

Ramsden, John. A Major - or a minor - story? Rev. of The Major Effect, ed. Dennis Kavanagh and Anthony Seldon. 5.4 (1994): 75-77.

Ray, Garrett W. Local weeklies under siege. 4.1 (1993): 42-47.

Redding, Don. The wrong focus on calamities. 9.4 (1998): 65-70.

Reed, Jane. In defence of the tabloids. Ethel to Elysium: 'Drop Dead'. 3.1 (1992): 10-15.

regulation: see Datta-Ray 5.4; Lewis 8.3; Lustig 1.2; Mansfield 6.1; Mathias 4.1; Milne 1.1; Whitehead 4.2; Willis 2.4; Wöhrle 1.3.

reporting: see Chester 2.2; Douglas 9.3; Editorial 2.4, 3.4; Evans 1.3; Hannan 6.4; Hennessy 1.1; Keeble 3.3; Lessing 1.2; Philo 1.4; see also bias; crime; courts; editing; European press; European Union; general elections; financial; industrial; investigative journalism; moral panics; myths; news values; obituary; parliament; political; royalty; sport; television documentary; trauma; war reporting.

research: see American journalism Rubenstein 4.3; analysis; bias Barnett 1.3, 1.4, Finney 2.2, Franklin 10.1, Miller 4.1; black and Asian journalists Ainley 5.4; British Broadcasting Corporation Küng 9.2; broadcasting statistics; environment Anderson 4.2, Longman 5.2, Worcester 7.3; European Union Morgan 6.4; general elections Bromley 8.2, Curtice 7.4; globalisation Gurevitch 2.1; investigative journalism Doig 3.4; journalist characteristics Delano 7.1, Henningham 5.3, Tunstall 6.3; local newspapers Head 6.2, Prichard 4.4; magazines Lewis 5.1; newspaper statistics; Northern Ireland Inglesias 3.1; Press Complaints Commission Bromley 9.1; psephology Worcester 2.4; public relations Cowley 6.1; reporting Philo 1.4; Scottish devolution poll McGregor 10.4.

Reuters: See Fenby 4.1.

Reynolds, Gillian. Radio Five Live - fast and fizzy... 5.2 (1994): 10-14.

– Wireless goes to War. 2.3 (1991): 17-22.

Richards, Steve. The media's big game hunt. 6.2 (1995): 60-65.

Riddell, Peter. A shift of power - and influence. 10.3 (1999): 26-33.

– Media manipulation much exaggerated. 3.2 (1992): 11-16.

– Not a word of thanks from Lady Thatcher. 5.1 (1994): 6-8.

Robinson, Allan. Letter. 8.1 (1997): 79-80.

Rodger, George. See McCabe 2.1.

Roth, Andrew. The Lobby's 'dying gasps'? 10.3 (1999): 21-25.

Rothermere, Esmond: see MacArthur 9.3.

Rothermere, Lord (Vere Harmsworth). Interview: see Hagerty 8.4.

Routledge, Paul. A mission to understand. 6.2 (1995): 32-34.

Rowland, Tiny: see Linklater 4.3.

Rowling, Megan: see Mayes 7.2.

royalty: see Greenslade 8.4; Zec 5.4.

Rubenstein, Sondra M. Message or massage - the electronic illusion. 3.1 (1992): 47-54.

– Politicians and pollsters in the U.S. Research. 4.3 (1993): 39-50.

– The bleaker side at the Cape of Good Hope. 8.1 (1997): 57-67.

– The flow and ebb of US libel law. 3.3 (1992): 47-56.

Rusbridger, Alan. For whom the 'cod-fax' tolls...' 5.4 (1994): 5-10.

– Smearsault - And Schmalz. Rev. of Sunrise, by Sir Larry Lamb. 1.2 (1990): 52-54.

The Guardian answers back. Response. 8.1 (1997): 72-74.

– Why are we the libel capital of the world? 8.3 (1997: 25-30.

Russian press: see Armour 3.1, 4.2.


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Sampson, Anthony. The crisis at the heart of our media. 7.3 (1996): 42-51.

Sarler, Carol. A feature writer's mea culpa. 7.1 (1996): 28-31.

– Gotcha... 9.3 (1998): 6-11.

Schaffer, Gordon. Letter. 1.2 (1990): 70.

Scotsman: see Linklater 5.3.

Scottish devolution poll: see McGregor 10.4.

Scottish newspapers: see Kemp 5.4; McGregor 10.4.

Seymour-Ure, Colin. Let's have a register for media barons. 10.3 (1999): 6-10.

– O'Donnell's seating plan mystery. Rev. of Newspaper Power: the new national press in Britain, by Jeremy Tunstall. 7.2 (1996): 76-78.

– The afterlife of political cartoons. 8.1 (1997): 17-22.

– Time for No.10 to catch up. 6.4 (1995): 36-41.

Shayler, David: see McCrystal 10.4.

Shepherd, D. Letter. 3.2 (1992): 55-56; 4.1 (1993): 62; 5.1 (1994): 65.

Shepherd, Robert. The challenge of political biography. 8.1 (1997): 23-28.

Short, Clare: see Currie 2.4.

shorthand: see Delano 8.2.

Shrimsley, Bernard. The Curranticus Bunticus. Rev. of Stick It Up Your Punter! by Peter Chippindale and Chris Horrie. 2.2 (1990): 66-69.

Shulman, Milton: see Edwards 9.3.

Silver, Eric. Letter. 1.4 (1990): 57.

Silverman, Jon. Media management by the Met. 3.2 (1992): 42-46.

Simpson, Geoffrey. Not all of us are 'NO' men... A P.R.O. view. 1.4 (1990): 39-41.

– The week we also took Rome... 5.3 (1994): 43-45.

Sloman, Anne. Robert Carvel. 2.1 (1990): 38-40.

Smith, Andreas Whittam. A New 'Golden Age'? 1.1 (1989): 19-21.

Smith, Andreas Whittam: see Leapman 10.4.

Smith, W. Eugene: see Flynn 4.1.

Snoddy, Raymond. The mogul and the mandarins. 4.4 (1993): 17-20.

–, and Paul Woolwich. The Poodle bites back. 2.2 (1990): 15-21.

soaps: see Kilborn 4.4.

sociology: see Goodman 5.3; Hoggart 3.3.

South African press: see Omond 3.2; Rubenstein 8.1.

spin doctors: see Goodman (Editorial) 8.4; Heffer 6.4; Johnson 6.3, 10.4; Jones 1.2, 2.4, 5.4; McGrenera 10.2; Tebbit 8.2; see also government information.

Spain, Nancy: see Edwards 8.3.

sport: see Engel 5.1; Glendinning 3.4; Kareithi 1.3.

standards: see Goodman (Editorial) 1.1, 1.2, 10.1, 10.4; Greenslade 8.1; Hall 4.1; Heffer 5.1; Kaiser 8.2; Knight 3.2; Lynch 9.3; Maddox 10.2; McConnell 9.3; McCrystal 6.2; Stevens 5.3, 9.4; Stothard 8.2; Wober 9.1; see also regulation.

Stead, Jean. Orange juice and abundant ethics. Great Editors. 9.4 (1998): 36-40.

Stead, W. T: see Baylen 3.3.

Steele, Jonathan. The reporter who came back from the cold. Rev. of Child of My Time: an Englishman's journey in a Divided World, by Mark Frankland. 10.3 (1999): 71-74.

Stephen, Andrew. Domestic strife at NBC and the NYT. 3.1 (1992): 36-41.

Stern, Stefan. Letter. 10.2 (1999): 80.

Stevens, Ronald. A victim of timidity. Rev. of The Odd Thing About the Colonel and other pieces, by Colin Welch. Ed. Craig Brown and Frances Welch. 8.3 (1997): 68-70.

– Did The Guardian get it wrong? 7.4 (1996): 11-14.

– For 'dumbing down' read 'accessible'. 9.4 (1998): 32-35.

– Forgotten despatches from Tribulation-on-Sea. 8.4 (1997): 43-49.

– Hubris at the court of St Birt. Controversy Column. 4.3 (1993): 13-15.

– Letter. 8.2 (1997): 79.

– Mixing it with Dr Mahathir. Controversy Column. 5.2 (1994): 21-23.

– The arrival of the Tesco Times. 4.4 (1993): 27-30.

– The scandal that got away. Controversy Column. 5.3 (1994): 20-23.

– Vexatious voices in the BBC. Controversy Column. 6.1 (1995): 35-38.

– Wanted (urgently): skilful PR for Cedric. Controversy Column. 6.3 (1995): 22-23.

Stephenson, Hugh: see Bromley 9.1.

Stothard, Peter. ...and looking up from the coalface. 8.2 (1997): 25-33.

Stott, Richard. J'accuse. 10.1 (1999): 10-18.

Straw, Jack. Democracy on the spike. 4.4 (1993): 45-54.

– Wanted: one bold editor. 10.1 (1999): 29-34.

style: see Gaba 5.2; Goodman 2.3; Leapman 3.4; Waterhouse 1.1, 4.4, 9.4; Wober 8.2.

Sun: see Rusbridger 1.2; Shrimsley 2.2.

Sunday Correspondent: see Cole 2.1.

Sunday Times: see Hagerty 3.1; Knightley 9.2; Linklater 4.2, 7.4; Page 9.1; Stevens 5.3.

Sweeney, John. 'Why am I doing this?' Rev. of SHOCK! HORROR! The Tabloids in Action! by S. J. Taylor. 3.1 (1992): 58-60.


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tabloids: see Boston 10.2; Cudlipp 5.3, 8.2; Daly 3.4; Goodman 1.3; Hagerty 2.2, 5.2; Potter 4.2; Reed 3.1; Sarler 9.3; Sweeney 3.1.

Tait, Richard. Switching off politics. 8.3 (1997): 19-24.

Taniguchi, Tomohiko. Mr Suzuki and the Tokyo treadmill. 10.2 (1999): 52-57.

Tatchell, Peter. Media mendacity over 'outing'. 9.2 (1998): 23-28.

Taylor, Neville. Behind The Whitehall Curtain. 1.1 (1989): 29-33.

Tebbit, Norman. Better as a salesman than a spin-doctor. Rev. of Ultimate Spin-doctor: Tim Bell - His Life and Fast Times, by Mark Hollingsworth. 8.2 (1997): 15-17.

technology: see Barnett 7.3; Delano 8.1; Douglas 9.3; Goodman (Editorial) 5.3, 7.1; Greenslade 4.2; Hodgson 8.3; Leapman 10.4; Smith 1.1; see also Internet.

Telegraph: see Beeston 7.2; Boston 3.4, 8.3; Johnson 1.3; Leapman 6.4, 7.2; Stevens 8.3; Wheatcroft 9.1.

television documentary: see Aaronovitch 1.4; Maddox 10.2.

Thatcher, Margaret: see Hollingsworth 6.3.

Thatcher, Mark: see Hollingsworth 6.3.

Thomas, Nigel. Letter. 6.1 (1995): 80.

Tierney, Stephen. Extra protection for the press. 9.2 (1998): 66-70.

Tinker, Jack: see Hagerty 8.1.

Tit-Bits: see Boston 9.2

Topping, Dennis. Letter. 3.1 (1992): 61-62.

Torode, John. Letter. 6.2 (1995): 80.

training: see Clother 6.2; Cole 7.2; Delano 8.2; Ellis 5.3; Phillips 7.3.

trauma: see Gaba 2.3; Winston 6.4.

Trelford, Donald. Letter. 1.3 (1990): 57.

Tremayne, Charles. All's well in ITV current affairs. 4.3 (1993): 16-19.

– Made in Manchester. 6.3 (1995): 33-37.

Tucker, Geoffrey. A tale of two Heaths. Rev. of The Course of My Life, by Edward Heath. 9.4 (1998): 22-26.

Tumber, Howard. Taming the truth. 4.1 (1993): 37-41.

See Bromley 8.2.

Tunstall, Jeremy. From gentlemen to 'journos'. Research. 6.3 (1995): 54-59.

Tusa, John. A mission to be there. 3.4 (1992): 5-9.

– Broken contract. 6.2 (1995): 5-8.

– Pollution of the global village. 5.4 (1994): 39-47.

Twisk, Russell. Five Live - channel for chatterers. 5.3 (1994): 39-42.

Tyler, Christian. So you want to be a journalist, eh? 3.2 (1992): 32-35.


U

Underwood, John. Living in Spin. Rev. of Images of Power, by Brendan Bruce. 3.2 (1992): 65-67.

– The horse that talked and talked. 3.1 (1992): 26-28.

–, and Brian Hulls. Farzad Bazoft. The Lessons and the Questions. 1.3 (1990): 11-14.


V

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Vallance, Aylmer: see Cox 7.3.

van der Vat, Dan. Mutual bewilderment in Central Asia. 9.2 (1998):53-58.

Vulliamy, Ed. This war has changed my life. 4.2 (1993): 5-11.


W

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Wakeham, Lord. Why I stand by the Code. 9.4 (1998): 27-31.

Wakeham, Lord: see Wilson 6.4.

Walker, Alexander. Walker and Petley on CRASH course. . . Response. 9.1 (1998): 41-44.

war reporting: see For censors' eyes only 6.2; Gowing 6.4, 8.4; Holme 6.2; Johnson 8.2; Knightley 7.1, Mayes 5.4; Rubenstein 3.1; Simpson 5.3; see also Bosnian War; CNN; Gulf War; Kosovo; propaganda.

Waterhouse, Keith. A small industrial town, plus El Vino. 6.4 (1995) 26-31.

– Climbing the column. 6.3 (1995): 12-15.

– El Vino-Veritas; but where now? 3.1 (1992): 7-9.

– Excuse me, M'lord, did I hear you murmur 'F... off'? 9.4 (1998): 17-21.

– In search of the Sunday papers. 9.3 (1998): 30-32.

– Instruction for the verbally challenged. Rev. of English for Journalists, by Wynford Hicks. 4.4 (1993): 59-60.

– Newspaper Style. 1.1 (1989): 7-18.

Waterhouse, Keith: see Goodman 2.3.

Watson, Paul. A witness to war. 10.3 (1999): 41-54.

Watts, Janet. A frank appraisal of the nearly peer. 9.3 (1998): 37-42.

Weiland, Sidney. Letter. 6.1 (1995): 79.

Welch, Colin: see Stevens 8.3.

Welsh press: see Fowler 8.4; Hannan 8.2.

Wenham, Brian. 'The Jeremys' of the Beeb. Rev. of The Battle for the BBC, by Steven Barnett and Andrew Curry. 6.1 (1995): 70-71.

Wheatcroft, Geoffrey. Mister (Lord) Deedes came to town. Rev. of Dear Bill: W. F. Deedes Reports, by W. F. Deedes. 9.1 (1998): 71-74.

Wheeler, David. Fading echoes of E.C.4. 4.2 (1993): 33-35.

Wheen, Francis. Dancing all over the paper. Rev. of Walter Winchell, by Neal Gabler. 6.2 (1995): 74-77.

Whitcomb, Noel: see Edwards 2.3.

White, Michael. The bogus cult. Rev. of Dirty Politics: Deception, Distraction and Democracy, by Kathleen Hall Jamieson. 4.1 (1993): 48-50.

Whitehead, Andrew. Rebel for Reform. The Charles Bradlaugh Story. History Corner. 2.2 (1990): 35-39.

Whitehead, Phillip. Auntie's governing antics. 4.2 (1993): 12-16.

Whitehorn, Katherine. Now it's orgasms on the front cover. 9.1 (1998): 32-40.

Willans, Angela. Problem page ethics. 4.2 (1993): 40-43.

Williams, Granville. Expunging the multi-media nightmare. 5.3 (1994): 34-38.

Williams, John. Oh yes - Blair was there as well. Rev. of Campaign 1997, by Nicholas Jones. 8.3 (1997): 57-59.

Willis, John. A lawyers' picnic. 2.4 (1991): 27-31.

Wilson, Charles. A kind word for Lord Wakeham. 6.4 (1995): 16-20.

Wilson, Harold: see Proops 5.3.

Winchell, Walter: see Wheen 6.2.

Winston, Brian. Letter. 4.4 (1993): 71.

– No wimps in Wenatchee. 6.4 (1995): 32-35.

Winstone, Ruth. Editing Tony Benn. 2.3 (1991): 44-49.

Wintour, Charles. Free to offend. Rev. of Treacherous estate, by Michael Leapman. 3.4 (1992): 56-57.

– The magic ingredient - high standards. Rev. of Plant Here The Standard, by Dennis Griffiths. 7.1 (1996): 69-70.

Wober, Mallory. English - as she ain't spoken. 8.2 (1997): 64-67.

– The death of news. Rev. of Newszak & News Media, by Bob Franklin. 9.1 (1998): 75-77.

Woffinden, Bob. The easy journalism of child abuse. Controversy Column. 7.4 (1996): 46-51.

Wöhrle, Marta. The Rabbit and The Cobra. 1.3 (1990): 15-19.

Woodward, Bob: see Greengrass 7.1.

Woolwich, Paul: see Snoddy 2.2.

women in journalism: see Allen 1.4; Cudlipp 5.3; Freely 6.3; Griffiths 2.3; van der Vat 9.2; Whitehorn 9.1.

Worcester, Robert M. Are newsrooms bored with Greenery? 4.3 (1993): 24-26.

– Cutting through the greenery. Research. 7.3 (1996): 66-70.

– Letter. 3.4 (1992): 62-64; 8.3 (1997): 78-79.

– The media in the General Election. 3.3 (1992): 16-25.

– Who buys what - for why? 2.4 (1991): 46-52.

Worsthorne, Peregrine. Confessions of an unrepentant columnist. 4.4 (1993): 5-7.

– Scourge of the PC pieties. Rev. of 'You Couldn't Make It Up,' by Richard Littlejohn. 7.1 (1996): 62-64.

Worsthorne, Sir Peregrine: see Goodman 4.4.


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Young, Hugo. Can Television tell the Truth? 2.1 (1990): 11-16.

Young, Hugo. Interview: see Hagerty 10.3.

young readers: see McCrystal 6.3.

Yugoslavia: see Bosnian War; Kosovo.

Zec, Donald. Death – by a thousand cuttings. 5.4 (1994): 35-38.

– There was an old woman in Stoke... 4.3 (1993): 9-12.


Books reviewed

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   Books Reviewed   Back to Top

Allen, Tim, and Jean Seaton, eds. The Media of Conflict: war reporting and representation of ethnic violence. Zed Books. See Knightley 10.2.

Anstey, Joanna, and John Silverlight, eds. The Observer Observed. Barrie & Jenkins. See Linton 2.4.

Archer, Jeffrey. The Fourth Estate. Harper Collins. See Hagerty 7.3.

Baker, Kenneth. The Prime Ministers: An Irreverent Political History in Cartoons. Thames and Hudson. See Baylen 7.1.

Barnett, Steven, and Andrew Curry. The Battle for the BBC. Aurum Press. See Wenham 6.1.

Bartle, John. See Johnson 10.1.

Beeston, Richard. Looking For Trouble: The Life and Times of a Foreign Correspondent. Brassey's. See Edwards 8.3.

Belfield, Michael, Christopher Hird and Sharon Kelly. MURDOCH; The Decline of an Empire. Macdonald. See Linklater 3.2.

Bell, Martin. In Harm's Way: Reflections of a War Zone Thug. Hamish Hamilton. See Gowing 6.4.

Belsey, Andrew, and Ruth Chadwick, eds. Ethical Issues in Journalism and the Media. Routledge. See Leapman 4.3.

Bledsoe, Robert. Henry Fothergill Chorley. Victorian Journalist. Ashgate. See Baylen 10.3.

Bolton, Roger. 'Death on the Rock.' W. H. Allen-Optomen. See Aaronovitch 1.4.

Bourne, Richard. Lords of Fleet Street: The Harmsworth Dynasty. Unwin, Hyman. See Baistow 2.3; Cudlipp 2.3.

Bower, Tom. Fayed: The Unauthorized Biography. London: MacMillan. See Maddox 10.1.

Tiny Rowland - a rebel tycoon. Heinemann. See Linklater 4.3.

Boyd-Barrett, Oliver, and Daya Kishan Thussu. Contra-flow in Global News International and Regional News Exchange Mechanisms. John Libbey and UNESCO. See Gaber 3.4.

Brown, Gerry. Exposed! Sensational True Story of Fleet St. Reporter. Virgin. See Connew 6.4.

Bruce, Brendan. Images of Power. Kegan Page. See Underwood 3.2.

Cesarani, David. The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841-1991. Cambridge University Press. See Baylen 5.2.

Chadwick, Ruth. See Leapman 4.3.

Chester, Gail. See Neustatter 1.2.

Chester, Lewis. See Knightley 2.1.

Chippindale, Peter, and Chris Horrie. Stick It Up Your Punter! Heinemann. See Shrimsley 2.2.

Chisholm, Anne, and Michael Davie. BEAVERBROOK: A life. Hutchinson. See Edwards 3.4.

Clarke, Steve. See Leapman 5.1.

Cockett, Richard. David Astor and the Observer. Andre Deutsch. See Hodgson 3.2.

Twilight of Truth. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. See McCaffrey 1.1.

Cole, John. As It Seemed To Me: Political Memoirs. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. See Brunson 6.2.

Coleridge, Nicholas. Paper Tigers. Heinemann. See Fireman 4.3.

Collis, Rose. A Trouser-wearing Character: The Life and Times of Nancy Spain. Cassell. See Edwards 8.3.

Cooke, Alistair. Fun and Games with Alistair Cooke. Pavilion Books. See Boston 6.1.

Corbett, Val, Joyce Hopkirk and Eve Pollard. Splash. Headline. See Freely 6.3.

Cox, Sir Geoffrey. Pioneering Television News. John Libbey. See Goodman 6.4.

Crew, Ivor, Brian Gosschalk and John Bartle, eds. Why Labour won the General Election of 1997. Frank Cass. See Johnson 10.1.

Crowson, N. J., ed. Fleet Street: Press Barons and Politics. The Journals of Collin Brooks, 1932-1940. Cambridge University Press for the Royal Historical Society. See Baylen 10.4.

Curry, Andrew. See Wenham 6.1.

Davie, Michael. See Edwards 3.4.

Day, Sir Robin. 'But with Respect.' Weidenfeld and Nicolson. See Goodman 4.2.

Deacon, David, and Peter Golding. Taxation and Representation: The media, political communications and the poll tax. John Libbey. See Gaber 6.3.

Deedes, W. F. Dear Bill: W. F. Deedes Reports. Macmillan. See Wheatcroft 9.1.

Dickey, Julienne, and Gail Chester. Feminism and Censorship. Ultra Violet Books. See Neustatter 1.2.

Dickie, John. The Boys on the Bongo Bus: the media and travelling diplomacy. University of Luton Press. See Leapman 8.4.

Engel, Matthew. Tickle the Public. One Hundred Years of the Popular Press. Victor Gollancz. See Edwards 7.2.

Epstein, James A. Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual and Symbol in England, 1790-1850. Oxford University Press. See Boston 7.1.

Fallows, James. Breaking the News; How the Media Undermine American Democracy. New York: Pantheon Books, 1996. See Goodman (Editorial) 7.2.

Fielding, Nick. See McCrystal 10.4.

Flournoy, Don M. CNN World Report: Ted Turner's International News Coup. John Libbey & Company. See Gaber 4.1.

Frankland, Mark. Child of My Time: an Englishman's journey in a Divided World. Chatto and Windus. See Steele 10.3.

Franklin, Bob. Newszak & News Media. London: Arnold, 1997. See Wober 9.1.

Packaging Politics: Political Communications in Britain's Media Democracy.

Edward Arnold. See Gaber 5.4.

–, and David Murphy, eds. Making The Local News: Local Journalism in context. Routledge. See Isaaman 9.4.

–, and David Murphy. What News? The Market, Politics and the Local Press. Routledge. See Petley 3.3.

Gabler, Neal. Walter Winchell. Picador Books. See Wheen 6.2.

Garland, Nicholas. Not Many Dead - Journal of a Year in Fleet Street. Hutchinson. See Johnson 1.3.

Glover, Stephen. Paper Dreams. Jonathan Cape. See Cole 4.2.

–, ed. Secrets of the Press: Journalists on journalism. Penguin Books. See Edwards 10.4.

Golding, Peter. See Gaber 6.3.

Goldsworthy, Frank. Want You Soonest: Memoirs of a War Correspondent. Dorrance Publishing Co. See Johnson 8.2.

Gosschalk, Brian. See Johnson 10.1.

Grace Robertson; Photojournalist of the 50's. Virago. See McCabe 1.2.

Graham, Katherine. Personal History. Weidenfeld. See Goodman 8.3.

Greenslade, Roy. Maxwell's Fall. Simon and Schuster. See Goodman 3.2.

Griffiths, Dennis. Plant Here The Standard. Macmillan Press. See Wintour 7.1.

Halimi, Serge. Les nouveaux chiens de garde (The New Watchdogs). Liber-Raisons d'Agir. See Hodgson 9.2

Hall, Jan. See Purden 9.3.

Hall, William. See Hagerty 7.4.

Hallett, Michael. The Real Story of Picture Post. The Article Press. See Nicholas 6.1.

Hallin, Daniel C. We Keep America on Top of the World: television journalism and the public sphere. Routledge. See Hodgson 5.1.

Hannan, Patrick. The Welsh Illusion. Seren books. See Goodman 10.1.

Hansen, Anders, ed. The Mass Media and Environmental Issues. Leicester University Press. See Gaber 4.4.

Harris, Michael, and Tom O'Malley, eds. Studies in Newspaper and Periodical History. Mainstream. See Boston 8.1.

Harris, Robert. Good and Faithful Servant - The Unauthorized Biography of Bernard Ingham. Faber and Faber. See Haviland 2.2.

Harrison, Martin. Young Meteors: British Photojournalism 1957-65. Jonathan Cape. See Jacobson 9.4.

Hart-Davis, Duff. The House the Berrys Built - Inside the Telegraph 1928-1986. Hodder and Stoughton. See Johnson 1.3.

Hartwell, Lord. William Camrose: Giant of Fleet Street. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. See Boston 3.4.

Havill, Adrian. Deep Truth - The Lives of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. USA: Birch Lane Press. See Greengrass 7.1.

Heath, Edward. The Course of My Life. Hodder and Stoughton. See Tucker 9.4.

Hicks, Wynford. English for Journalists. Routledge. See Waterhouse 4.4.

Hill, Peter, selector. Great Parliamentary Speeches: A collection of recordings. EMI. See Gaber 6.3.

Hird, Christopher. See Linklater 3.2.

Hoggart, Richard. Townscape With Figures: Farnham - Portrait of an English Town. Chatto & Windus. See Goodman 5.3.

Holden, Anthony, ed. The Last Paragraph - The Journalism of David Blundy. Heinemann. See Chester 2.2.

Hollingsworth, Mark. Ultimate Spin-doctor: Tim Bell - His Life and Fast Times. Hodder. See Tebbit 8.2.

–, and Nick Fielding. Defending the Realm: MI5 and the Shayler Affair. Andre Deutsch. See McCrystal 10.4.

Hopkirk, Joyce. See Freely 6.3.

Horrie, Chris. See Shrimsley 2.2.

–, and Steve Clarke. Fuzzy Monsters - Fear and Loathing at the BBC. Heinemann. See Leapman 5.1.

–, and Adam Nathan. L!ve TV: Tellybrats and Topless Darts. Simon and Schuster. See Hagerty 10.1.

Ingham, Bernard. Kill the Messenger. Harper Collins. See Aitken 2.4.

Isaacs, Jeremy. Storm Over 4 - A Personal Account. Weidenfeld and Nicholson. See Petley 1.4.

Jacobs, Eric, and Robert Worcester. We British. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. See Editorial 2.1.

Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. Dirty Politics: Deception, Distraction and Democracy. Oxford University Press. See White 4.1. John Morgan's Wales: A Personal Anthology. Christopher Davies. See Howard 4.4.

Jones, Aled. Powers of the Press. Newspapers, Power and the Public in Nineteenth-Century England. Scolar Press. See Baylen 8.2.

Jones, Mervyn. Michael Foot. Victor Gollancz. See Edwards 5.2.

Jones, Nicholas. Campaign 1997. Gollancz. See Brunson 8.3; Williams 8.3.

Soundbites and Spin Doctors. Cassell. See Johnson 6.3.

Sultans of Spin: The Media and the New Labour Government. Gollancz. See McGrenera 10.2.

Jones, Stanley. Hazlitt; A Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. See Boston 1.2.

Junor, Sir John. Memoirs: Listening For A Midnight Tram. Chapmans. See Hollingsworth 2.2.

Kavanagh, Dennis, and Anthony Seldon, eds. The Major Effect. Macmillan. See Ramsden 5.4.

Keane, John. Tom Paine; a Political Life. Bloomsbury. See Boston 6.2.

Kelly, Sharon. See Linklater 3.2.

Kieran, Matthew. Media Ethics. Routledge. See Leapman 9.2.

Kiernan, Thomas. Citizen Murdoch. USA: 1986. See Linklater 1.1.

Koch, Tom. Journalism in the 21st Century. Adamantine Press. See Boston 3.3.

Lamb, Sir Larry. Sunrise. Papermac. See Rusbridger 1.2.

Leapman, Michael. Treacherous estate. Hodder and Stoughton. See Wintour 3.4.

Lewis, Anthony. Make no Law: The Sullivan Case and the First Amendment. Random House. See Bindman 3.3.

Littlejohn, Richard. 'You Couldn't Make it Up.' Heinemann. See Worsthorne 7.1.

Low, Robert, ed. Observer Book of Profiles. W. H. Allen. See Linton 2.4.

Linton, David. The Twentieth-Century Newspaper Press in Britain: an annotated bibliography. Cassell-Mansell. See Boston 5.3.

Maarek, Phillippe. Political Marketing and Communication. University of Luton Press/John Libbey Media. See Gaber 6.3; Johnson 8.3.

MacArthur, Brian. Deadline Sunday; A Life in the Week of the Sunday Times. Hodder and Stoughton. See Hagerty 3.1.

Macintyre, Donald. Mandelson, the Biography. HarperCollins. See Powell 10.2.

McCullin, Donald, with Lewis Chester. Unreasonable Behaviour: an autobiography. Jonathan Cape. See Knightley 2.1.

McPhilemy, Sean. The Committee: Political Assassination in Northern Ireland. Roberts Rinehart, 1998. See Greenslade 10.3.

Maitland, Sir Donald. Diverse Times, Sundry Places. Sussex Academic Press. See Goodman 7.4.

Maloney, Mike, and William Hall. Flash! Splash! Crash! Mainstream. See Hagerty 7.4.

Molloy, Michael. The Century. Macdonald. See Goodman 1.3.

Morris, Sally, and Jan Hallwood. Living with Eagles. The Lutterworth Press. See Purden 9.3.

Murphy, David. See Isaaman 9.4; Petley 3.3.

Murphy, Paul Thomas. Toward a Working-Class Canon: Literary Criticism in British Working-Class Periodicals, 1816-1858. Ohio State University Press. See Boston 6.3.

Nathan, Adam. See Hagerty 10.1.

Neil, Andrew. Full Disclosure. Macmillan. See Linklater 7.4.

Oborne, Peter. Alastair Campbell: New Labour and the Rise of the Media Class. Aurum Press. See Johnson 10.4.

Page, Caroline. US Official Propaganda During the Vietnam War, 1965-1973: The Limits of Persuasion. Leicester University Press. See Leapman 7.4.

Parsons, Wayne. The Powers of the Financial Press; Journalism and Economical Opinion in Britain and America. Edward Elgar. See Hird 1.2.

Passow, Judah. Photographs. Days of Rage, Beirut 1982-85. CD-ROM, Further Vision. See Lustig 7.1.

Pollard, Eve. See Freely 6.3.

Raphael, Adam. Grotesque Libels. Corgi Books. See Hooper 4.2.

Read, Donald. The Power of News: The History of Reuters. Oxford University Press. See Fenby 4.1.

Reed, David. The Popular Magazine in Britain and the United States of America, 1880-1960. University of Toronto Press. See Baylen 10.2.

Richards, Huw. The Bloody Circus. Pluto Press. See Clements 8.4.

Seaton, Jean. See Knightley 10.2.

Scammell, Margaret. Designer Politics: How elections are Won. Macmillan. See Gaber 6.3.

Schaffer, Gordon. Baby in the Bathwater. The Book Guild. See Goodman 7.3.

Schlesinger, Philip, and Howard Tumber. Reporting Crime: the Media Politics of Criminal Justice. Clarendon Press. See Petley 6.3.

Sebastyn, Amanda. 1968-1978-1988 - From Women's Liberation to Feminism. Ultra Violet Books. See Neustatter 1.2.

Seldon, Anthony. See Ramsden 5.4.

Shawcross, William. Rupert Murdoch. Chatto and Windus. See Leapman 3.3.

Short, Clare. Dear Clare - This being what women feel about page three. Hutchinson Radius. See Currie 2.4.

Shulman, Milton. Marilyn, Hitler and Me. Andre Deutsch. See Edwards 9.3.

Siklos, Richard. Shades of Black: Conrad Black and the world's fastest-growing press empire. Heinemann. See Leapman 7.2.

Silverlight, John. See Linton 2.4.

Silvester, Christopher, ed. The Penguin Book of Columnists. See Edwards 9.1.

The Penguin book of interviews. Viking. See Goodman 5.1.

Snoddy, Raymond. The Good, The Bad, and the Unacceptable. Faber and Faber. See Knight 3.2.

Greenfinger: The rise of Michael Green and Carlton Communications. Faber and Faber. See Dyke 7.4.

Sommerville, C. John. The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Information. Oxford University Press. See Boston 9.4.

Taylor, Geoffrey. Changing Faces: a history of the Guardian 1956-88. Fourth Estate. See Cole 4.2.

Taylor, John. War Photography, Realism in the Press. Routledge. See McCabe 3.1.

Taylor, S. J. SHOCK! HORROR! The Tabloids in Action! Bantam Press. See Sweeney 3.1.

Stalin's Apologist, Walter Duranty: The New York Times's Man in Moscow. Oxford University Press. See Kirkhorn 2.1.

The Reluctant Press Lord; Esmond Rothermere and the Daily Mail. Weidenfeld and Nicholson. See MacArthur 9.3.

The Blitz - The photographs of George Rodger. Penguin Books. See McCabe 2.1.

Thomson, Alex. Smokescreen: The Media, The Censors, The Gulf. Laburnham and Spellmount. See Lustig 3.4.

Thussu, Daya Kishan. See Gaber 3.4.

Tumber, Howard. See Petley 6.3.

Tunstall, Jeremy. Newspaper Power: the new national press in Britain. Oxford: Clarendon Press. See Seymour-Ure 7.2.

Wacks, Raymond. Privacy and Press Freedom. Blackstone. See McConnell 6.4.

Waterhouse, Keith. English Our English. Viking. See Goodman 2.3.

Welch, Colin. The Odd Thing About the Colonel and other pieces. Ed. Craig Brown and Frances Welch. Bellew Publishing with The Daily Telegraph. See Stevens 8.3.

West, Richard. The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Daniel Defoe. Harper and Collins. See Baylen 9.1.

Whitcomb, Noel. A Particular Kind of Fool: an autobiography. Anthony Blond. See Edwards 2.3.

Willumson, Glenn G. W. Eugene Smith and the Photographic Essay. Cambridge University Press. See Flynn 4.1.

Wintour, Charles. The Rise and Fall of Fleet Street. Hutchinson, 1989. See Edwards 1.1.

Woolmar, Christian. Censorship. Wayland. See Petley 4.3.

Worcester, Robert. See Editorial 2.1.

Worsthorne, Sir Peregrine. Tricks of Memory. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. Orion Publishing. See Goodman 4.4.