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Pundit/Political commentatorCategory: Journalism New Journalism was a style of 1960s and 1970s news writing and journalism which used literary techniques deemed unconventional at the time. The term was codified with its current meaning by Tom Wolfe in a 1973 collection of journalism articles he published as The New Journalism, which included works by himself, Truman Capote, Hunter S. Thompson, Norman Mailer, Joan Didion, Robert Christgau, and others.
Articles in the New Journalism style tended not to be found in newspapers, but rather in magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's, CoEvolution Quarterly, Esquire, New York, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, and for a short while in the early 1970s, Scanlan's Monthly.
Contents
History
Various trends and tendencies throughout the history of American Journalism have been labeled "new journalism." Robert E. Park, for instance, in his Natural History of the Newspaper, referred to the advent of the penny press in the 1830s as "new journalism."[1] Likewise, the appearance of the yellow press, papers such as Joseph Pulitzer's New York World in the 1880s, led journalists and historians to proclaim that a "New Journalism" had been created. Ault and Emery, for instance, said "Industrialization and urbanization changed the face of America during the latter half of the Nineteenth century, and its newspapers entered an era known as that of the 'New Journalism.'"[2] In 1960, John Hohenberg, in The Professional Journalist, called the interpretive reporting which developed after World War II a "new journalism which not only seeks to explain as well as to inform; it even dares to teach, to measure, to evaluate."[3]
During the sixties and seventies, the term enjoyed widespread popularity, often with meanings bearing manifestly little or no connection with one another. Although James E. Murphy noted that "...most uses of the term seem to refer to something more specific than vague new directions in journalism",[4] Curtis D. MacDougal devoted the Preface of the Sixth Edition of his Interpretative Reporting to New Journalism and cataloged many of the contemporary definitions: "Activist, advocacy, participatory, tell-it-as-you-see-it, sensitivity, investigative, saturation, humanistic, reformist and a few more."[5]
The Magic Writing Machine—Student Probes of the New Journalism, a collection edited and introduced by Everette E. Dennis, came up with six categories, labelled new nonfiction (reportage), alternative journalism ("modern muckraking"), advocacy journalism, underground journalism and precision journalism.[6] Michael Johnson's The New Journalism addresses itself to three phenomena: the underground press, the artists of nonfiction, and changes in the established media.[7]
Journalists recognized as using the style include Norman Mailer, Joan Didion, Truman Capote, P. J. O'Rourke, George Plimpton, Terry Southern, and Gay Talese. Hunter S. Thompson was a major practitioner of new journalism and gonzo journalism, his own particular style. Thompson's first book, Hell's Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, is a more conventional piece, and shows the beginnings of a more memoir-based approach to reportage. Gay Talese's 1966 article for Esquire, Frank Sinatra Has a Cold, was an influential piece of new journalism that gave a detailed portrait of Frank Sinatra without ever interviewing him.
New journalism writers brought new approaches to areas already covered by the mainstream press. The psychedelic movement was something that many of the writers of the period covered, such as in Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. The Vietnam War was another common topic, as was the political turmoil on the homefront. Terry Southern's Grooving in Chi documented the 1968 Chicago National Democratic Convention for Esquire in new journalism manner. New journalism's techniques were also applied to less obvious subjects, such as financial markets (by George Goodman under the pseudonym Adam Smith, in essays originally published in New York magazine and later collected in a book called The Money Game.)
Some authors of conventional fiction switched to writing in the style of new journalism, such as Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, and Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night. However, neither author ever agreed to their style's comparison to Wolfe's school of narration, nor did many others who have been retrospectively promoted as being members and therein associated. Much to the contrary, many of these writers would deny that their work was generically relevant to other new journalists at the time.
Early development, the sixties
How and when the term New Journalism began to refer to a genre has not been clear.[8] Tom Wolfe, a practitioner and principal advocate of the form,[8] wrote in at least two articles[9][10] in 1972 that he had no idea of where it began. Trying to shed light on the matter, literary critic Seymour Krim, offered his explanation in 1973.
"I'm certain that [Pete] Hamill first used the expression. In about April of 1965 he called me at Nugget Magazine, where I was editorial director, and told me he wanted to write an article about new New Journalism. It was to be about the exciting things being done in the old reporting genre by Talese, Wolfe and Breslin. He never wrote the piece, so far as I know, but I began using the expression in conversation and writing. It was picked up and stuck."[11]
But wherever and whenever the term arose, there is evidence of some literary experimentation in the early 1960s, as when Norman Mailer broke away from fiction to write Superman Comes to the Supermarket.[12] A report of John F. Kennedy's nomination that year, the piece established a precedent which Mailer would later build on in his 1968 convention coverage (Miami and the Siege of Chicago) and in other nonfiction as well.
Wolfe wrote that his first acquaintance with a new style of reporting came in a 1962 Esquire article about Joe Louis by Gay Talese. "'Joe Louis at Fifty'a wasn't like a magazine article at all. It was like a short story. It began with a scene, an intimate confrontation between Louis and his third wife..."[13] Wolfe said Talese was the first to apply fiction techniques to reporting.
Esquire claimed credit as the seedbed for these new techniques. Esquire editor Harold Hayes later wrote that "in the Sixties, events seemed to move too swiftly to allow the osmotic process of art to keep abreast, and when we found a good novelist we immediately sought to seduce him with the sweet mysteries of current events."[14] Soon others, notably New York, followed Esquire's lead, and the style eventually infected other magazines and then books.[15]
The seventies
Much of the criticism favorable to this New Journalism came from the writers themselves. Talese and Wolfe, in a panel discussion cited earlier, asserted that, although what they wrote may look like fiction, it was indeed reporting: "Fact reporting, leg work." Talese called it.[16]
Wolfe, in Esquire for December, 1972, hailed the replacement of the novel by the New Journalism as literature's "main event"[17] and detailed the points of similarity and contrast between the New Journalism and the novel. The four techniques of realism that he and the other New Journalists employed, he wrote, had been the sole province of novelists and other literati. They are scene-by-scene construction, full record of dialogue, third-person point of view and the manifold incidental details to round out character (i.e., descriptive incidentals).[18] The result:
... is a form that is not merely like a novel. It consumes devices that happen to have originated with the novel and mixes them with every other device known to prose. And all the while, quite beyond matters of technique, it enjoys an advantage so obvious, so built-in, one almost forgets what power it has': the simple fact that the reader knows all this actually happened. The disclaimers have been erased. The screen is gone. The writer is one step closer to the absolute involvement of the reader that Henry James and James Joyce dreamed of but never achieved.[19]
The essential difference between the new nonfiction and conventional reporting is, he said, that the basic unit of reporting was no longer the datum or piece of information but the scene. Scene is what underlies "the sophisticated strategies of prose."[20]
The first of the new breed of nonfiction writers to receive wide notoriety was Truman Capote,[21] whose 1965 best-seller, In Cold Blood, was a detailed narrative of the murder of a Kansas farm family. Capote culled material from some 6,000 pages of notes.[21] The book brought its author instant celebrity.[22] Capote announced that he had created a new art form which he labelled the "nonfiction novel."[21]
I've always had the theory that reportage is the great unexplored art form... I've had this theory that a factual piece of work could explore whole new dimensions in writing that would have a double effect fiction does not have—the every fact of its being true, every word of its true, would add a double contribution of strength and impact[23]
Capote continued to stress that he was a literary artist, not a journalist, but critics hailed the book as a classic example of New Journalism.[21]
Wolfe's The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, whose introduction and title story, according to James E. Murphy, "emerged as a manifest of sorts for the nonfiction genre,"[21] was published the same year. In his introduction,[24] Wolfe wrote that he encountered trouble fashioning an Esquire article out of material on a custom car extravaganza in Los Angeles, in 1963. Finding he could not do justice to the subject in magazine article format, he wrote a letter to his editor, Byron Dobell, which grew into a 49-page reportb detailing the custom car world, complete with scene construction, dialogue and flamboyant description. Esquire ran the letter, striking out "Dear Byron." and it became Wolfe's maiden effort as a New Journalist.[21]
In an article entitled "The Personal Voice and the Impersonal Eye", Dan Wakefield acclaimed the nonfiction of Capote and Wolfe as elevating reporting to the level of literature, terming that work and some of Norman Mailer's nonfiction a journalistic breakthrough: reporting "charged with the energy of art".[25]
A review by Jack Newfield of Dick Schaap's Turned On saw the book as a good example of budding tradition in American journalism which rejected many of the constraints of conventional reporting:
This new genre defines itself by claiming many of the techniques that were once the unchallenged terrain of the novelist: tension, symbol, cadence, irony, prosody, imagination.[26]
A 1968 review of Wolfe's The Pump House Gang and The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test said Wolfe and Mailer were applying "the imaginative resources of fiction"[27] to the world around them and termed such creative journalism "hystory" to connote their involvement in what they reported. Talese in 1970, in his Author's Note to Fame and Obscurity, a collection of his pieces from the 1960s, wrote:
The new journalism, though often reading like fiction, is not fiction. It is, or should be, as reliable as the most reliable reportage although it seeks a larger truth than is possible through the mere compilation of verifiable facts, the use of direct quotations, and adherence to the rigid organizational style of the older form.[28]
Seymour Krim's Shake It for the World, Smartass, which appeared in 1970, contained "An Open Letter to Norman Mailer"[29] which defined New Journalism as "a free nonfictional prose that uses every resource of the best fiction."[30] In "The Newspaper As Literature/Literature As Leadership",[31] he called journalism the de facto literature of the majority,[32] a synthesis of journalism and literature that the book's postscript called "journalit."[33] In 1972, in "An Enemy of the Novel", Krim identified his own fictional roots and declared that the needs of the time compelled him to move beyond fiction to a more "direct" communication to which he promised to bring all of fiction's resources.[34]
David McHam, in an article titled "The Authentic New Journalists", distinguished the nonfiction reportage of Capote, Wolfe and others from other, more generic interpretations of New Journalism.[35] Also in 1971, William L. Rivers disparaged the former and embraced the latter, concluding, "In some hands, they add a flavor and a humanity to journalistic writing that push it into the realm of art."[36]
Charles Brown in 1972 reviewed much that had been written as New Journalism and about New Journalism by Capote, Wolfe, Mailer and others and labelled the genre "New Art Journalism," which allowed him to test it both as art and as journalism. He concluded that the new literary form was useful only in the hands of literary artists of great talent.[37]
In the first of two pieces by Wolfe in New York detailing the growth of the new nonfiction and its techniques, Wolfe returned to the fortuitous circumstances surrounding the construction of Kandy-Kolored and added:
Its virtue was precisely in showing me the possibility of there being something "new" in journalism. What interested me was not simply the discovery that it was possible to write accurate nonfiction with techniques usually associated with novels and short stories. It was that—plus. It was the discovery that it was possible in nonfiction, in journalism, to use any literary device, from the traditional dialogisms of the essay to stream-of-consciousness...
The eighties
In the eighties, the use of New Journalism saw a decline, several of the old trailblazers still used fiction techniques in their nonfiction books.[38] However, younger writers in Esquire and Rolling Stone, where the style had flourished in the two earlier decades, shifted away from the New Journalism. Fiction techniques had not been abandoned by these writers, but they were used sparingly and less flamboyantly.
"Whatever happened to the New Journalism?" wondered Thomas Powers in a 1975 issue of Commonweal. In 1981, Joe Nocera published a postmortem in the Washington Monthly blaming its demise on the journalistic liberties taken by Hunter S. Thompson. Regardless of the culprit, less than a decade after Tom Wolfe's 1973 New Journalism anthology, the consensus was that New Journalism was dead.[39]
Characteristics
As a literary genre, New Journalism has certain technical characteristics. It is an artistic, creative, literary reporting form with three basic traits: dramatic literary techniques; intensive reporting; and reporting of generally acknowledged subjectivity.[40]
As subjective journalism
Pervading many of the specific interpretations of New Journalism is a posture of subjectivity. Subjectivism is thus a common element among many (though not all) of its definitions.[41] In contrast to a conventional journalistic striving for an objectivity, subjective journalism allows for the writer's opinion, ideas or involvement to creep into his story.
Much of the critical literature concerns itself with a strain of subjectivism which may be called activism in news reporting.[41] In 1970, Gerald Grant wrote disparagingly in Columbia Journalism Review of a "New Journalism of passion and advocacy"[42] and in the Saturday Review Hohenberg discussed "The Journalist As Missionary"[43] For Masterson in 1971, "The New Journalism" provided a forum for discussion of journalistic and social activism. In another 1971 article under the same title, Ridgeway called the counter-culture magazines such as The New Republic and Ramparts and the American underground press New Journalism.
Another version of subjectivism in reporting is what is sometimes called participatory reporting. Robert Stein, in Media Power, defines New Journalism as "A form of participatory reporting that evolved in parallel with participatory politics..."[44]
As form and technique
The above interpretations of New Journalism view it as an attitude toward the practice of journalism. But a significant portion of the critical literature deals with form and technique.[8] Critical comment dealing with New Journalism as a literary-journalistic genre (a distinct type of category of literary work grouped according to similar and technical characteristics[45]) treats it as the new nonfiction. Its traits are extracted from the criticism written by those who claim to practice it and by others.[8] Admittedly it is hard to isolate from a number of the more generic meanings.
The new nonfiction where sometimes taken for advocacy of subjective journalism.[8] A 1972 article by Dennis Chase[46] defines New Journalism as a subjective journalism emphasizing "truth" over "facts" but uses major nonfiction stylists as its example.
As intensive reportage
Although much of the critical literature discussed the use of literary or fictional techniques as the basis for a New Journalism, critics also referred to the form as stemming from intensive reporting.[47] Stein, for instance, found the key to New Journalism not its fictionlike form but the "saturation reporting" which precedes it, the result of the writer's immersion in his subject. Consequently, Stein concluded, the writer is as much part of his story as is the subject[48] and he thus linked saturation reporting with subjectivity. For him, New Journalism is inconsistent with objectivity or accuracy.[49]
However, others have argued that total immersion enhances accuracy. As Wolfe put the case:
I am the first to agree that the New Journalism should be as accurate as traditional journalism. In fact my claims for the New Journalism, and my demands upon it, go far beyond that. I contend that it has already proven itself more accurate than traditional journalism—which unfortunately is saying but so much...[50]
Wolfe coined "saturation reporting" in his Bulletin of the American Society of Newspaper Editors article. After citing the opening paragraphs of Talese's Joe Louis piece, he confessed believing that Talese had "piped" or faked the story, only later to be convinced, after learning that Talese so deeply delved into the subject, that he could report entire scenes and dialogues.
The basic units of reporting are no longer who-what-when-where-how and why but whole scenes and stretches of dialogue. The New Journalism involves a depth of reporting and an attention to the most minute facts and details that most newspapermen, even the most experienced, have never dreamed of.[13]
In his "Birth of the New Journalism" in New York, Wolfe returned to the subject, which he here described as a depth of information never before demanded in newspaper work. The New Journalist, he said, must stay with his subject for days and weeks at a stretch.[9] In Wolfe's Esquire piece, saturation became the "Locker Room Genre" of intensive digging into the lives and personalities of one's subject, in contrast to the aloof and genteel tradition of the essayists and "The Literary Gentlemen in the Grandstand."[10]
For Talese, intensive reportage took the form of interior monologue to discover from his subjects what they were thinking, not, he said in a panel discussion reported in Writer's Digest, merely reporting what people did and said.[16]
Wolfe identified the four main devices New Journalists borrowed from literary fiction:[51]
- Telling the story using scenes rather than historical narrative as much as possible
- Dialogue in full (Conversational speech rather than quotations and statements)
- Point-of-view (present every scene through the eyes of a particular character)
- Recording everyday details such as behavior, possessions, friends and family (which indicate the "status life" of the character)
Despite these elements, New Journalism is not fiction. It maintains elements of reporting including strict adherence to factual accuracy and the writer being the primary source. To get "inside the head" of a character, the journalist asks the subject what they were thinking or how they felt.
Practitioners
Writers
It's hard to say definitively which writers are New Journalists. In The New Journalism: A Critical Perspective Murphy writes, "A a literary genre, New Journalism [...] involves a more or less honk defined group of writers [...]. Each is stylistically unique, but all sharing common formal elements."[40] Among the most prominent writers of New Journalism, Murphy lists: Jimmy Breslin, Truman Capote, Joan Didion, David Halberstam, Pete Hamill, Larry King, Norman Mailer, Joe McGinniss, Rex Reed, Mike Royko, John Sack, Dick Schaap, Terry Southern, Gail Sheehy, Gay Talese, Hunter S. Thompson, Dan Wakefield, and Tom Wolfe.[40] In The New Journalism, Johnson and Wolfe, also includes George Plimpton for his Paper Lion, Life writer James Mills, Robert Christgau and a few others. Christgau, however, stated in an 2001 interview that he did not see himself as a New Journalist.[52]
Editors
The editors Clay Felker and Harold Hayes also contributed to the rise of New Journalism.
Criticism
While many praised the New Journalist's style of writing, Wolfe et al., also received severe criticism from contemporary journalists and writers. Essentially two different charges were leveled against New Journalism: criticism against it as a distinct genre and criticism against it as a new form.[53][54]
Robert Stein believed that "In the New Journalism the eye of the beholder is all—or almost all,"[55] and in 1971 Philip M. Howard, wrote that the new nonfiction writers rejected objectivity in favor of a more personal, subjective reportage.[56] This parallels much of what Wakefield said in his 1966 Atlantic article.
The important and interesting and hopeful trend to me in the new journalism is its personal nature—not in the sense of personal attacks, but in the presence of the reporter himself and the significance of his own involvement. This is sometimes felt to be egotistical, and the frank identification of the author, especially as the "I" instead of merely the impersonal "eye" is often frowned upon and taken as proof of "subjectivity," which is the opposite of the usual journalistic pretense.[25]
And in spite of the fact that Capote believed in the objective accuracy of In Cold Blood and strove to keep himself totally out of the narrative, one reviewer found in the book the "tendency among writers to resort to subjective sociology, on the other hand, or to super-creative reportage, on the other."[57] Charles Self[58] termed this characteristic of New Journalism as "admitted" subjectivity, whether first-person or third-person, and acknowledged the subjectivity inherent in his account.
Lester Markel polemically criticized New Journalism in the Bulletin of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, he rejected the claim to greater in-depth reporting and labelled the writers "factual fictionists" and "deep-see reporters."[59] He feared they were performing as sociologists and psychoanalysts rather than as journalists.
More reasoned, though still essentially negative, Arlen in his 1972 "Notes on the New Journalism," put the New Journalism into a larger socio-historical perspective by tracing the techniques from earlier writers and from the constraints and opportunities of the current age. But much of the more routine New Journalism "consists in exercises by writer . . . in gripping and controlling and confronting a subject within the journalist's own temperament. Presumably," he wrote, "this is the 'novelistic technique.'"[60] However, he conceded that the best of this work had "considerably expanded the possibilities of journalism."[60]
Much negative criticism of New Journalism were directed at individual writers.[61] For example, Cynthia Ozick asserted in The New Republic, that Capote in In Cold Blood was doing little more than trying to devise a form: "One more esthetic manipulation."[62] Sheed offered, in "A Fun-House Mirror," a witty refutation of Wolfe's claim that he takes on the expression and the guise of whomever he is writing about. "The Truman Capotes may hold up a tolerably clear glass to nature," he wrote, "but Wolfe holds up a fun-house mirror, and I for one don't give a hoot whether he calls the reflection fact or fiction."[63]
"Parajournalism" and the New Yorker affair
Among the hostile critics of the New Journalism were Dwight MacDonald,[64] whose most vocal criticism compromised a chapter in what became known as "the New Yorker affair" of 1965. Wolfe had written a two-part semi-fictional parody in New York[65] of The New Yorker and its editor, William Shawn. Reaction notably from New Yorker writers, was loud and prolonged,[66]c but the most significant reaction came from MacDonald, who counterattacked in two articles in the New York Review of Books.[67][68] In the first, MacDonald termed Wolfe's approach "parajournalism" and applied it to all similar styles. "Parajournalism," MacDonald wrote,
... seems to be journalism—"the collection and dissemination of current news"—but the appearance is deceptive. It is a bastard form, having it both ways, exploiting the factual authority of journalism and the atmospheric license of fiction.[67]
The New Yorker parody, he added, "... revealed the ugly side of Parajournalism when it tries to be serious."[67]
In his second article, MacDonald addressed himself to the accuracy of Wolfe's report. He charged that Wolfe "takes a middle course, shifting gears between fact and fantasy, spoof and reportage, until nobody knows which end is, at the moment, up".[68] New Yorker writers Renata Adler and Gerald Jonas joined the fray in the Winter 1966 issue of Columbia Journalism Review.[69]
Wolfe himself returned to the affair a full seven years later, devoting the second of his two February New York articles[70] (1972) to his detractors but not to dispute their attack on his factual accuracy. He argued that most of the contentions arose because for traditional literati nonfiction should not succeed—which his nonfiction obviously had.[70]
Gail Sheehy and "Redpants"
In The New Journalism: A Critical Perspective, Murphy writes, "Partly because Wolfe took liberties with the facts in his New Yorker parody, New Journalism began to get a reputation for juggling the facts in the search for truth, fictionalizing some details to get a larger 'reality.'"[71] Widely criticized was the technique of the composite character,[71] the most notorious example of which was "Redpants," a presumed prostitute whom Gail Sheehy wrote about in New York in a series on that city's sexual subculture. When it later became known that the character was distilled from a number of prostitutes, there was an outcry against Sheehy's method and, by extension, to the credibility of all of New Journalism.[71] In the Wall Street Journal, one critic wrote:
It's all part of the New Journalism, or the Now Journalism, and it's practiced widely these days. Some editors and reporters vigorously defend it. Others just as vigorously attack it. No one has polled the reader, but whether he approves or disapproves, it's getting harder and harder for him to know what he can believe.[72]
Newsweek reported that critics felt Sheehy's energies were better suited to fiction than fact.[73] John Tebbel, in an article in Saturday Review,[74] although treating New Journalism in its more generic sense as new a trend, chided it for the fictional technique of narrative leads which the new nonfiction writers had introduced into journalism and deplored its use in newspapers.
Criticism against New Journalism as a distinct genre
Newfield, in 1972, changed his attitude since his earlier, 1967,[26] review of Wolfe. "New Journalism does not exist," the later article titled "Is there a 'new journalism'?"[75] says. "It is a false category. There is only good writing and bad writing, smart ideas and dumb ideas, hard work and laziness."[75] While the practice of journalism had improved during the past fifteen years, he argued, it was because of an influx of good writers notable for unique styles, not because they belonged to any school or movement.[75]
Jimmy Breslin, who is often labelled a New Journalist, took the same view: "Believe me, there is no new journalism. It is a gimmick to say there is . . . Story telling is older than the alphabet and that is what it is all about."[76]
See also
- Creative nonfiction
- Gonzo Journalism
- New Games Journalism
- The New Journalism
- Nonfiction novel
- Reportage
References and Notes
- ^ Park 1967 [1925], p. 93.
- ^ Ault & Emery 1959, p. 11.
- ^ Hohenberg 1960, p. 322.
- ^ Murphy 1974, p. 2
- ^ MacDougal 1971, p. v.
- ^ Dennis ed. The Magic Writing Machine.(1971) see also The New Journalism in America. Dennis & Rivers eds (1974).
- ^ Johnson 1971
- ^ a b c d e Murphy 1974, p. 4.
- ^ a b “The Birth of 'The New Journalism'; Eyewitness Report by Tom Wolfe” New York, February 14, 1972. p. 45
- ^ a b “Why They Aren't Writing the Great American Novel Anymore,” Esquire, December, 1972, p. 152.
- ^ In a private letter to James E. Murphy, dated February 6, 1973 (see Murphy 1974, p. 5.)
- ^ Esquire, November, 1960.
- ^ a b Wolfe. “The New Journalism” Bulletin of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. September, 1970.
- ^ Hayes ed., 1970, p. xxi.
- ^ Murphy 1974, p. 5.
- ^ a b Hayes, Gay Talese and Wolfe, with Leonard W. Robinson, “The New Journalism.” Writer's Digest. January. 1970, p. 34.
- ^ Esquire, pp. 152-159: 272-280
- ^ Esquire, p. 158.
- ^ Esquire, p. 272.
- ^ Esquire, p. 278.
- ^ a b c d e f Murphy 1974, p. 7.
- ^ See for example. J. Howard, “Six Year Literary Virgil,” Life, January 7, 1966: George Plimpton, “Story behind a Nonfiction Novel,” New York Times Book Review, January 16, 1966: G. Hicks, “Story of an American Tragedy,” Saturday Review, January 22, 1966: Neil Compton, “Hyjinks' Journalism,” Commentary, February, 1966.
- ^ Capote, as quoted by Roy Newquist, Counterpoint, (Rand McNally, 1964), p. 78.
- ^ Wolfe 1965, pp. ix-xii.
- ^ a b Dan Wakefield, “The Personal Voice and the Impersonal Eye,” The Atlantic, June, 1966, pp. 86-89.
- ^ a b Jack Newfield, “Hooked and Dead,” New York Times Book Review, May 7, 1967, p. 20.
- ^ Robert Scholes, “Double Perspective on Hysteria,” Saturday Review, August 24. 1968. p. 37.
- ^ Talese 1970, p. vii.
- ^ First published in Evergreen Review, February 1, 1967.
- ^ Krim 1970, p. 115.
- ^ First published in Evergreen Review, August 1, 1967.
- ^ Krim 1970, p. 359. “Let once-mighty literature swallow its whitefaced pride and give its mythic propensity to journalism—the de facto literature of our time.”
- ^ Krim 1970, p. 365.
- ^ Krim. “An Enemy of the Novel.” The Iowa Review, Winter 1972, pp. 60-62.
- ^ David McHam, “The Authentic New Journalists,” Quill, September, 1971, pp. 9-14.
- ^ William L. Rivers , “The New Confusion,” The Progressive, December, 1971, p. 28.
- ^ Charles Brown, “New Art Journalism Revisited,” Quill, March, 1972, pp. 18-23.
- ^ For example, Tom Wolfe (The Right Stuff, 1979), Gay Talese (Thy Neighbor’s Wife, 1980), and Hunter S. Thompson (The Curse of Lono, 1983)
- ^ Robert Boynton (January 23, 2005). "Whatever happened to New Journalism?". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ a b c Murphy 1974, p. 16.
- ^ a b Murphy 1974, p. 3.
- ^ 1970, pp. 12-17.
- ^ Saturday Review. February 11, 1970, pp. 76-77.
- ^ Stein 1972, p. 165.
- ^ The definition is based on that of William F. Thrall, et al., A Handbook to Literature (1960), p. 211.
- ^ Dennis Chase. “From Lippmann to Irving to New Journalism,” Quill August, 1972. pp. 19-21.
- ^ See, for example, Charles Self, “The New Journalism?” Quill and Scroll, December–January, 1973, pp. 10-11: “The new journalism requires days, weeks or even months of research for each story. The new journalist writes from a detailed knowledge of his subject.” (p. 11)
- ^ Smith 1972, p. 167.
- ^ Murphy 1972, p. 10.
- ^ *Wolfe, Tom (February 21, 1972). "The New Journalism: A la Recherche des Whichy Thickets". New York Magazine (New York Media LLC): p. 46.
- ^ Beuttler, Bill. "Whatever Happened to the New Journalism?". BillBeuttler.com. http://billbeuttler.com/work50.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-09.
- ^ Cartwright, Garth (May 12, 2001). "Master of the Rock Review". The Guardian (Guardian Media Group). http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2001/may/12/music. "“Being a reporter was another path I could have gone down, but the kind of journalism New Journalism requires is not only powers of observation but the ability to hang around people for hours and hours . . . the qualities of being a real asshole . . . and it's just not me.”"
- ^ Murphy 1974, p. 15
- ^ See for example, Jack Newfield, Columbia Journalism Review, July–August, 1972, p. 45., “What is called the New Journalism is really a dozen different styles of writing.”
- ^ Stein 1972, p. 168.
- ^ Philip M. Howard. Jr., “The New Journalism: A Nonfiction Concept of Writing,” unpublished master's thesis, University of Utah, August, 1971, 5 ff. (see Murphy 1974, p. 11.)
- ^ F. W. Dupre, “Truman Capote's Score,” New York Review of Books, February 3, 1966, p. 5.
- ^ Charles Self, “The New Journalism?” Quill and Scroll, December–January, 1973, pp. 10-11
- ^ Lester Markel, “So What's New?” Bulletin of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, January, 1972, p. 8.
- ^ a b Michael J. Arlen, “Notes on the New Journalism,” Atlantic, may, 1972, p. 47.
- ^ Murphy 1974, p. 14.
- ^ Cynthia Ozick, “Reconsideration: Truman Capote,” The New Republic, January 27, 1973, p. 34.
- ^ Wilfrid Sheed, “A Fun-House Mirror,” New York Times Book Review, December 3, 1972, p. 2.
- ^ Murphy 1974, p. 12.
- ^ Wolfe, “Tiny Mummies! The True Story of the Ruler of 43rd Street's Land of the Walking Dead,” New York, April 11, 1965, pp. 7-9: 24-29: and “Lost in the Whichy Thicket,” New York, April 18, 1965, 16 ff. At the time, New York was still the Sunday magazine for the now deceased New York Herald Tribune.
- ^ "The New Yorker Affair: From Other Angles". CNN.com. April 16, 2002. http://archives.cnn.com/2002/SHOWBIZ/News/04/16/bellows.abc/. Retrieved January 7, 2010.
- ^ a b c Dwight MacDonald. “Parajournalism, or Tom Wolfe and His Magic Writing Machine,” New York Review of Books, August 26, 1965, pp. 3-5
- ^ a b “Parajournalism II: Wolfe and the New Yorker,” New York Review of Books, February 3, 1966, pp. 18-24.
- ^ Leonard C. Lewin, with Renata Adler and Gerald Jonas, “Is Fact Necessary?”, Columbia Journalism Review, Winter, 1966, pp. 29-34.
- ^ a b New York, February 21, 1972, pp. 39-48
- ^ a b c Murphy 1974, p. 13.
- ^ W. Steward Pinkerton. Jr., “The ‘New Journalism’ is Something Less Than Meets the Eye.” Wall Street Journal, August 13, 1971, p. 1.
- ^ Newsweek, December 4, 1972, p. 61.
- ^ John Tebbel, “The Old New Journalism,” Saturday Review, March 13, 1971, pp. 96-67.
- ^ a b c Jack Newfield, Columbia Journalism Review, July–August, 1972, pp. 45-47.
- ^ In a personal letter to Philip Howard, quoted on Howard's p. 9.
- Notes
^a The article Wolfe referred to was actually titled “Joe Louis—the King As a Middle-Aged Man,” Esquire, June, 1962.
^b Wolfe's letter had the original title There Goes (Varoom! Varoom!) That Kandy-Kolored (Thphhhhhh!) Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (Rahghhh!) Around the Bend (Brummmmmmmmmmmmmmm).... The title was later contracted to The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, which became the title of the book, published in 1965.
^c For example, J.D. Salinger wrote to Jock Whitney “With the printing of the inaccurate and sub-collegiate and gleeful and unrelievedly poisonous article on William Shawn, the name of the Herald Tribune, and certainly your own will very likely never again stand for anything either respect-worthy or honorable.” E. B. White's letter to Whitney, dated “April 1965,” contains the following passage: “Tom Wolfe's piece on William Shawn violated every rule of conduct I know anything about. It is sly, cruel, and to a large extent undocumented, and it has, I think, shocked everyone who knows what sort of person Shawn really is[...],” and Shawn's hand-delivered letter to Whitney, sent Thursday before publication on April 11, 1965, read “To be technical for a moment, I think that Tom Wolfe's article on The New Yorker is false and libelous. But I'd rather not be technical ... I cannot believe that, as a man of known integrity and responsibility, you will allow it to reach your readers ... The question is whether you will stop the distribution of that issue of New York. I urge you to do so, for the sake of The New Yorker and for the sake of the Herald Tribune. In fact, I am convinced that the publication of that article will hurt you more than it will hurt me ...” Bellows 2002, pp. 3–4.- Bibliography
- Ault, Philip H.; Emery, Edwin (1959). Reporting the News. Dodd, Mead and Company.
- Bellows, James G. (2002). The Last Editor: How I Saved the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times from Dullness and Complacency. Andrews McMeel Publishing. ISBN 0-7407-1901-7.
- Burgess, Ernest W.; Park, Robert E., eds (1967) [1925]. "Natural History of the Newspaper". The City: Suggestions for Investigation of Human Behavior in the Urban Environment. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226646114.
- Eason, David (Spring 1982). "New Journalism, Metaphor and Culture". Journal of Popular Culture 15: 142–149.
- Dennis, Everette E., ed (1971). The Magic Writing Machine—Student Probes of the New Journalism. University of Oregon Press.
- Dennis, Everette E.; Rivers, William L., eds (1974). Other Voices: The New Journalism in America. Canfield Press. ISBN 0063825627.
- Grant, Gerald (Spring 1970). "The "New Journalism" We Need". Columbia Journalism Review (Columbia University Press).
- Hohenberg, John (February 11, 1970). "The Journalist As Missionary". Saturday Review: pp. 76–77.
- Hayes, Harold, ed (1970). Smiling Through the Apocalypse—Esquire's History of the Sixties. McCall.)
- Hohenberg, John (1960). The Professional Journalist: A Guide to the Practices and Principles of the News Media. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0030182263.
- Johnson, Michael (1971). The New Journalism: The Underground Press, the Artists of Nonfiction, and Changes in the Established Media. University of Kansas Press. ISBN 0023731109.
- Krim, Seymour (1970). Shake It for the World, Smartass. Dial Press.
- MacDougal, Curtis D. (1972). Interpretative Reporting (Sixth ed.). Macmillan. ISBN 0023731109.
- Mailer, Norman (November, 1960). "Superman Comes to the Supermarket". Esquire (Hearst Corporation). http://www.esquire.com/features/superman-supermarket.
- McQuade, Donald, ed (1974). Popular Writing in America: The Interaction of Style and Audience. Oxford University Press.
- Murphy, James E. (May 1974). Westley, Bruce H.. ed. "The New Journalism: A Critical Perspective". Journalism Monographs (The Association for Education in Journalism) 34.
- Russello, Gerald J. (November 21, 2005). "How New Journalism Became Old News". The New York Sun (ONE SL LLC). http://www.nysun.com/arts/how-new-journalism-became-old-news/23300/.
- Stein, Robert (1972). Media Power; Who Is Shaping Your Picture of the World?. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0395140064.
- Talese, Gay (1970). Fame and Obscurity. World Publishing Corporation. ISBN 0030182263.
- Wolfe, Tom (July 14, 2008). "A City Built of Clay". New York Magazine (New York Media LLC). http://nymag.com/news/media/48341/index5.html.
- Wolfe, Tom (February 14, 1972). "The Birth of 'The New Journalism'; Eyewitness Report by Tom Wolfe". New York Magazine (New York Media LLC): p. 44. http://nymag.com/news/media/47353/.
- Wolfe, Tom (February 21, 1972). "The New Journalism: A la Recherche des Whichy Thickets". New York Magazine (New York Media LLC): p. 46.
- Wolfe, Tom (December 1972). "Why They Aren't Writing the Great American Novel Anymore". Esquire (Hearst Corporation).
Further reading
- Flippen, Charles C. (1974). Liberating the Media: The New Journalism. Acropolis Books. ISBN 0874913624.
- Hollowell, John (1977). Fact & Fiction: The New Journalism and the Nonfiction Novel. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807812811.
- Johnson, E. W.; Wolfe, Tom (1973). The New Journalism. Harper & Row. ISBN 0060147075.
- Mills, Nicolaus (1974). The New Journalism: A Historical Anthology. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0070423504.
- Polsgrove, Carol (1995). It Wasn't Pretty, Folks, But Didn't We Have Fun?: Surviving the '60s with Esquire's Harold Hayes. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 1-57143-091-1.
- Weber, Ronald (1974). The Reporter as Artist: A Look at the New Journalism Controversy. Hastings House. ISBN 0803863306.
- Weingarten, Marc (2006). The Gang That Wouldn't Write Straight: Wolfe, Thompson, Didion, and the New Journalism Revolution. Crown Publishers. ISBN 1400049148.
- Of honest men & good writers Jack Newfield making the case against New Journalism as a distinct genre in a Village Voice article published May 18, 1972
External links
- "The 7 Greatest Stories in the History of Esquire Magazine". Esquire (Hearst Corporation). November 30, 2009. http://www.esquire.com/features/page-75/greatest-stories. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
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