This is a study of the gathering and presentation of news in late 19th-century England, a time when the vote was given to a large section of the working class, when public interest in the British Empire was on the rise, and when technology enabled newspapers to be produced more cheaply, distributed more quickly, and read more widely than ever before. Using manuscript collections and newspaper archives, the author describes the production and readership of newspapers, and the journalists within the industry--how they were recruited, the organization of their work, the ways in which they acquired their information, and their access to people in positions of power. The book moves on to review changes in news presentation in the last decades of Victorian England until the appearance of such papers as the Daily Mail in the 1890s.
- ISBN10 0198226241
- ISBN13 9780198226246
- Publish Date 28 November 1985
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 13 May 1993
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Oxford University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 310
- Language English