1st Edition

Media Warfare The Americanization of Language

By Melvin J. Lasky Copyright 2005
    374 Pages
    by Routledge

    365 Pages
    by Routledge

    Media Warfare is the concluding volume of Melvin Lasky's monumental The Language of Journalism, a series that has been praised as a "brilliant" and "original" study in communications and contemporary language. Firmly rooted in the critical tradition of H. L. Mencken, George Orwell, and Karl Kraus, Lasky's incisive analysis of journalistic usage and misusage gauges both the cultural and political health of contemporary society as well the declining standards of contemporary journalism.As in the first two volumes, Lasky's scope is cross-cultural with special emphasis on the sometimes conflicting, sometimes mutually influential styles of American and British journalistic practice. His approach to changes in media content and style is closely keyed to changes in society at large. Media Warfare pays particular attention to the gradual easing and near disappearance of censorship rules in the 1960s and after and the attendant effects on electronic and print media. In lively and irreverent prose, Lasky anatomizes the dilemmas posed by the entrance of formerly "unmentionable" subjects into daily journalistic discourse, whether for reasons of profit or accurate reporting. He details the pervasive and often indirect influence of the worlds of fashion and advertising on journalism with their imperatives of sensationalism and novelty and, by contrast, how the freeing of language and subject matter in literature--the novels of Joyce and Lawrence, the poetry of Philip Larkin--have affected permissible expression for good or ill. Lasky also relates this interaction of high and low style to the spread of American urban slang, often with Yiddish roots and sometimes the occasion of anti-Semitic reaction, into the common parlance of British no less than American journalists.Media Warfare concludes with prescriptive thoughts on how journalism might still be revitalized in a "post-profane" culture. Witty, timely, and deeply learned, the three volumes of The Language of Journalism are a crowning achievement to a distinguished career.

    1: Intermezzo Robert Burton’s Melancholy Dilemma: Journalism without Newspapers; 1: The Universal Assignment; 2: The Journalistic Imagination; 3: Reporting Murder, Observing the World; 4: From More to Tyndale to Burton; 5: Euphuistic Euphoria; 6: In Dreams Begin Irresponsibilities; 7: Secret Expletives; 8: Across the Centuries; 9: Mentioning the Unmentionable; 2: The Orgasm that Failed; 10: The Swinging Pendulum; 11: Searching for an Immoral Equivalent; 3: The Perception of American Words; 12: Feisty to Funky to Flaky; 13: Godperson and Other Funny Talk; 14: Perception Uncleansed; 15: Hillary, and Getting the Perception Right; 4: A Journalist Gets Serious: In P.G. Wodehouse’s “Noo Yawk”; 16: The Birth of a Crusader; 17: Facts, From Homer to Kafka (Elmore Leonard); 18: Jewish Gangsters and the East Side Story; 19: Was This How Things Really Were?; 5: In the Crossfire of the Media Wars; 20: Spin Doctors and Other Quacks; 21: Images of Violence, Words of War; 22: How Not to Report a War (Lebanon 1982); 23: Interchangeable Tragedy; 24: Of Realities and Realpolitik; 25: Spielberg, Or the Hollywood Scapegoat; 26: Journalism and Jewry; 27: White House Storm, Or “Hurricane Monica”; 6: Intimations of a Post-Profane Era; 28: A Curse on Boyle’s Law; 29: Scholem’s Nouns and Verbs; 30: Robert Graves, Or the Vision of a Post-Profane Era; 31: Counter-Revolution and Utopia

    Biography

    Melvin J. Lasky