Content-Type: text/html DAVID T. Z. MINDICH Ph.D Candidate, American Studies New York University 740 West End Avenue #10 New York City 10025 (212) 316-9211 E-mail: [log in to unmask] WORK IN PROGRESS: DISSERTATION PROJECT "Building the Pyramid: The Rise of 'Objectivity' in 19th Century American Journalism" WORK IN PROGRESS: DISSERTATION PROJECT DIVISION: HISTORY "Building the Pyramid: The Rise of 'Objectivity' in 19th Century American Journalism" Until the end of the nineteenth century, the discourse of storytelling nearly always took a standard form: first, an announcement of the utility or importance of the story, followed by a chronological narration, leaving the surprise, or what Aristotle called "Reversal of the Situation," for last. The New York Herald's 1847 news story, promising astonishment with the headline, "Terrible Flood in the West," fits this pattern: The reporter withholds what would be the modern "lead" until the final paragraphs: a woman and her six children are missing; the flood swept away $2 million worth of property. When, as a young man in 1892, Theodore Dreiser entered the world of journalism and the office of the Chicago Globe, his editor told him that the first paragraph of a news story must reveal "Who or what? How? When? Where?" giving away the punch line, or lead, in the first paragraph. Between 1847 and 1892 someone or someones, somehow, at sometime, somewhere, did something to change the way newspapers tell stories. My dissertation examines the confluence of forces that changed news from a chronological to an "objective" style. I have also begun to place journalistic "objectivity" in its broad cultural context. To this end, I have divided the dissertation into seven chapters, each corresponding to a different problem of journalistic "objectivity," presented here in four sections. Chapter 1: The Bull-Whipping of James Gordon Bennett and "Objectivity's" Primordial Soup and Chapter 2: "Between the Bank and the Kitchen": A Non-Partisan Ethic Emerges in the "Age of Inegalitarianism." Journalism historians generally place the birth of modern American journalism in the Jacksonian era and tie it to the "democratic spirit" of the age. Frank L. Mott calls what came before that era the "Dark Ages" of American journalism, a view shared by other historians. Daniel Schiller agrees and sees "a pattern of objectivity," emerging in the Jacksonian era. Michael Schudson, in Discovering the News, claims that the modern press emerged during the 1830s, an era he calls the "Age of Egalitarianism." But while Schudson and others claim that "objectivity" grew out of the era's democratic promise, evidence shows that the non-partisan ethic emerged in response to precisely opposite factors: violence, class conflict, racial and gender subjugation, and the failure of the Jacksonian promise. While the rhetoric of "objectivity" often included words like "fairness" and "balance," the reality of the Jacksonian era and beyond was that the political promises of egalitarianism rarely extended beyond white males. I have analyzed comments about "objectivity" in the abolitionist paper, the Liberator and the penny paper, the New York Herald, and found that they often reflected the degree to which the writers themselves felt a part of the Jacksonian political promise. James Gordon Bennett, the editor of the successful Herald, attempted to remove "color" from the news and placed himself firmly in the center of partisan politics. On the other hand, William L. Garrison, the editor of the Liberator, mirrored the views of Frederick Douglass and other abolitionists in refusing to be the "the political partisan of any man," standing outside the political process altogether. Garrison's writings reveal how much of Jacksonian discourse existed outside political boundaries. The outsiders had little use for a form that attempted to "balance" issues in partisan terms: there was generally no place in the public discourse for the enfranchisement of women, African-Americans and others. Chapter 3: "Between the Herald's Lack of Conviction and the Tribune's Excess of it": The Wire Services and the "Extreme Center" and Chapter 4: The Rise of Data and Naive Empiricism During this period, Horace Greeley promised his readers a "daily photograph of the world's events," the wire services began to market news "devoid of opinion," professional journalists' societies arose across America, and textbooks told journalism students to "chronicle, don't comment." Running contemporaneously alongside the journalists' increasing use of "objective" notions such as "detachment" and assertions of factuality, was a growing reliance in the social sciences on these same qualities. In anthropology and related fields, the rise of naive empiricism meant that professionals believed that their world was both knowable and namable, a view that seems to have contributed to the journalists' claim of "objectivity." During this period, public health workers moved from a speculative profession to one which justified its claims with scientific studies and data-analysis. In The Cholera Years, Charles Rosenberg outlines the response to the Cholera epidemics of 1832, 1849, and 1866. The medical response to the epidemic evolved from the horrific "cures" of 1832, including mercury poisoning and tobacco smoke enemas, to an efficient response in the 1866 epidemic. By 1866, according to Rosenberg, "statistics were becoming the reality of science." The journalists' increasing reliance on "facts" during the ante-bellum period rose in tandem with the rise of statistical analysis and data gathering in the sciences. Chapter 5 Edwin M. Stanton, Information Control, and the Inverted Pyramid Historians of journalism have long sought to find the first practitioners of the "inverted pyramid" style of news writing, a style which conveys the most important information in the first paragraphs of a story. Conventional wisdom dates the shift from the chronological to inverted pyramid style sometime in the late 19th century. Mitchell Stephens and others claim that the inverted pyramid form was developed by Civil War reporters "rushing to transmit their most newsworthy information over often unreliable telegraph lines." I present evidence that it was not journalists, but the War Department that was using the form during the Civil War. Indeed, I discovered that one of the first writers of inverted pyramids was Edwin M. Stanton, Lincoln's Secretary of War. Stanton has found his way into many histories of American journalism, but always because of his notoriety as a press censor. I reconcile Stanton's role as a writer of inverted pyramids with his tight rein on discourse, journalistic and otherwise, and see Stanton's "objective" news writing style and his censorship as two related sides of Stanton's repressive social control. There seems, of course, an irony in the suggestion that Stanton the censor may have also been a progenitor of a modern journalism. But given recent criticism of "objectivity" by Gaye Tuchman and others, which suggests journalists' over-reliance on figures of authority, a governmental source for the inverted pyramid may be less surprising, and indeed fitting. Chapter 6: Dana and Pulitzer: Information Confronts Story, and the Masculinity of "Objectivity." and Chapter 7: "A Slanderous and Nasty-Minded Mulattress": Ida B. Wells, Adolf Ochs, Lynching, and the Rhetoric of Balance By the last years of the nineteenth century, newspapers and wire services had embraced "objectivity" and the idea that reality lies between competing truth claims. But the idea that the world can be seen without human filters is, of course, problematic. For example, the New York Times and other papers attempted to "balance" their coverage of lynching: on the one hand lynching is evil, on the other "Negroes are prone" to rape. Ida B. Wells, the anti-lynching crusader, and others critiqued this equation and demonstrated that the underpinnings of the "objective" philosophy could be flawed. Wells' critique showed that "balance" oftentimes serves the status-quo, and in the case of lynching, is a skewed and dangerous construction. In return, the otherwise staid Times wrote an editorial calling Wells unpatriotic and a "slanderous and nasty-minded mulattress" in an attempt to discredit her criticisms. These chapters will examine the mainstream notions of "objectivity" by entering into these battles. * * * In addition to completing my study of its cultural context, there are two ways I am exploring the origins of and reasons for the rise of "objectivity" in the nineteenth century. First, I have begun to read a representative number of newspapers between 1835 and 1895. This is not prohibitive: even the largest newspapers of the period were twelve pages or less and only three ante-bellum dailies, the New York Tribune, Herald , and Times, exceeded four pages. I have already studied the entire run of New York Herald for most of the Civil War period. In his 1987 dissertation, Harlan Stensaas conducted a content analysis of six U.S. dailies from 1865 to 1954 searching for the origins of the inverted pyramid, but his time frame was wide, forcing his study to be thin. M oreover, he does not critically examine the notion of "objectivity," not even putting quotes around the word. Second, I have been exploring the journals, letters, and memoirs of a number of journalists of the transition period. For example, Recollections of the Civil War, by Charles A. Dana, an editor of the New York Tribune before the war, an aide to Stanton during it, and an editor and part owner of the New York Sun after it, is an excellent source for understanding both the and press and government's role in the rise of "objectivity." A Brief Bibliography Cott, Nancy F. The Bonds of Womanhood: "Woman's Sphere" in New England. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977. Crouthamel, James L. James Watson Webb, a Biography. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1969. Dana, Charles A. Recollections of the Civil War: With the Leaders at Washington and in the Field in the Sixties. New York: Appleton, 1898. Dana, Charles A. The Art of Newspaper Making. New York: D. Appleton, 1895. Entman, Robert. Democracy Without Citizens. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989. Gilje, Paul A. The Road to Mobocracy: Popular Disorder in New York City, 1783-1834. Chapel Hill, 1987. Gramling, Oliver. AP: The Story of News. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc, 1940. Greenberg, Kenneth. Masters and Statesmen. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985. Halttunen, Karen. Confidence Men and Painted Women : a Study of Middle-Class Culture in America, 1830-1870. New Haven : Yale University Press, 1982. Lippmann, Walter Public Opinion. New York, Harcourt, Brace, 1929. Litwack, Leon F. North of Slavery: the Negro in the Free States, 1790-1860. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961 McFeely, William S. Frederick Douglass. New York: Touchstone, 1991. McPherson, James M. Ordeal by fire : the Civil War and Reconstruction. New York : Knopf & Random House, 1982. Mott, Frank L. American Journalism: A History 1690-1960. New York: MacMillan, 1962. Oates, Stephen. With Malice Toward None: The Life of Abraham Lincoln. New York: Harper and Row, 1977. Pessen, Edward. Jacksonian America: Society, Personality, and Politics. Urbana: University of Illinois, 1985. Richards, Leonard L. Gentlemen of Property and Standing: Anti-Abolition Mobs in Jacksonian America. London: Oxford University Press, 1971 Rosenberg, Charles. The Cholera Years. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987. Schudson, Michael. Discovering the News. New York: Basic Books, 1978. Stensaas, Harlan. The Objective News Report: A Content Analysis of Selected U.S. Daily Newspapers for [sic] 1865 to 1954 Dissertation. (Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 1987 Stephens, Mitchell. A History of News: From the Drum to the Satellite. New York: Viking, 1988. Swanberg, W. A. Citizen Hearst. New York: Collier, 1961. Swanberg, W. A. Pulitzer. New York: Scribner, 1967. Tucher, Andrea J. "Froth and Scum": Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and the Axe-Murder in the First Years of the New York Penny Press. Dissertation, New York University, 1990. Tuchman, Gaye. Making News. New York: Free Press, 1978. Walters, Ronald G. American Reformers: 1815-1860. New York: Hill and Wang, 1978. Wells, Ida B. "Southern Horrors" (A late-19th century pamphlet on lynching) Wells, Ida B. Crusade for Justice: the Autobiography of Ida B. Wells. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970. Wilentz, Sean. Chants Democratic : New York City & the Rise of the American Working Class, 1788-1850. New York : Oxford University Press, 1984. Selected Articles Barthes, Roland. "Structure of the Fait-Divers " in Critical Essays. Trans. by Richard Howard. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1972. Cohen, Patricia C. "Unregulated Youth: Masculinity and Murder in the 1830s City." Radical History Journal, Winter 1992. Darnton, Robert. "Writing News and Telling Stories." In Daedalus, Spring, 1975. Hackett, Robert A. "Decline of a Paradigm? Bias and Objectivity in News Media Studies." In Critical Studies in Mass Communication. Vol. 1, number 3, September, 1984. Nerone, John C. "The Mythology of the Penny Press" with criticism by Michael Schudson, Dan Schiller, Donald L Shaw, and John J. Pauly, in Critical Studies in Mass Communication, December, 1987. Schudson, Michael "The Politics of Narrative Form: The Emergence of News Conventions in Print and Television." Daedalus, Fall 1982, vol. 3, number 4. Shaw, Donald L. "At the Crossroads: Change and Continuity in American Press News 1820-1860" Journalism History, volume 8, number 2 (Summer, 1981), 39-41. Shaw, Donald L. "News Bias and the Telegraph: a Study of Historical Change" Journalism Quarterly, (Spring, 1967). Tuchman, Gaye. "Objectivity as Strategic Ritual: An Examination of Newsmen's Notions of Objectivity." In American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 77, No. 4, January, 1972. Selected Newspapers New York Sun, selected issues, 1832-40. New York Herald, selected issues, 1835-95. New York Tribune, selected issues, 1840-65. New York Times, selected issues, 1851-95. Harper's Weekly, 1860-65. Freedom's Journal, selected issues, 1827-1835. The first African-American newspaper. Daily Sentinel, selected issues, 1830s. The Sentinel was a "freethinking" radical paper of the Jacksonian era. Liberator, 1831-40. The first major abolitionist newspaper. Frederick Douglass's Paper and North Star, selected issues. A Selection of Other Works, Consulted for Chapter 5 Andrews, J. Cutler. The North Reports The Civil War. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1955. Andrews, J. Cutler. The South Reports the Civil War. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1970. Bates, David H. Lincoln in the Telegraph Office. New York: D.Appleton-Century Company,1939. Emery, Edwin. The Press and America: an Interpretive History of Journalism. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1962. Gobright, Lawrence. Recollections of Men and Things at Washington During the Third of a Century. Philadelphia: Claxton, Remson & Haffelfinger, 1869. Grant, U.S. Memoirs and Selected Letters. Mary Drake McFeely et al., eds. Washington D.C.: Library of Congress, 1990. Greeley, Horace. Recollections of Busy Life. New York: Ford, 1873. Hudson, Frederic. Journalism in the United States, from 1690 to 1872. New York: Harper & Bros., 1873. Jones, Robert W. Journalism in the United States. New York: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1947. Kamm, Samuel R. The Civil War Career of Thomas A. Scott [Assistant Secretary of War]. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania dissertation, 1940. Lamont, Daniel S., Secretary of War, Et Al. The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1895. Series I, vols. XLVII part 3, XXXVIII parts 1, 5, XLVI parts 2,3, XXXVI part 3, LI part 1. Marszalek, John F. Sherman's Other War: The General and the Civil War Press. Memphis: Memphis State University Press, 1981. Oates, Stephen B. With Malice Toward None: The Life of Abraham Lincoln. New York: Harper and Row, 1977. Sherman, William Tecumseh. Memoirs of General W.T. Sherman. Washington: Library of Congress, 1990. Thomas, Benjamin S. and Hyman, Harold M. Stanton: The Life and Times of Lincoln's Secretary of War. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1962. Villard, Henry. The Memoirs of Henry Villard, Journalist and Financier, 1835-1900, in Two Volumes. (Vol. 1). Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1904. Ward, Geoffrey C. et al. The Civil War (video). 1990. DAVID T. Z. MINDICH Ph.D Candidate, American Studies New York University 740 West End Avenue #10 New York City 10025 (212) 316-9211 E-mail: [log in to unmask] WORK IN PROGRESS: DISSERTATION PROJECT "Building the Pyramid: The Rise of 'Objectivity' in 19th Century American Journalism" ABSTRACT The dissertation examines the confluence of forces that changed news writing from a chronological style in the 1830s to an "objective" one by the 1890s. Historians of journalism have long sought to find the first practitioners of the "inverted pyramid" style of news writing, a style which conveys the most important information in the first paragraphs of a story; the dissertation offers reasons for the development of the form and look at some early examples. The work also suggests that the rhetoric of "objectivity" was often connected with an over-reliance on governmental authority and voices of the "mainstream."