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OverviewHow a female investigative journalist brought down the world?s greatest tycoon and broke up the Standard Oil monopoly. Long before the rise of mega-corporations like Wal-Mart and Microsoft, Standard Oil controlled the oil industry with a monopolistic force unprecedented in American business history. Undaunted by the ruthless power of its owner, John D. Rockefeller (1839?1937), a fearless and ambitious reporter named Ida Minerva Tarbell (1857?1944) confronted the company known simply as ?The Trust.? Through her peerless fact gathering and devastating prose, Tarbell, a muckraking reporter at McClure?s magazine, pioneered the new practice of investigative journalism. Her shocking discoveries about Standard Oil and Rockefeller led, inexorably, to a dramatic confrontation during the opening decade of the twentieth century that culminated in the landmark 1911 Supreme Court antitrust decision breaking up the monopolies and forever altering the landscape of modern American industry. Based on extensive research in the Tarbell and Rockefeller archives, Taking on the Trust is a vivid and dramatic history of the Progressive Era with powerful resonance for the first decades of the twenty-first century. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Steve WeinbergPublisher: WW Norton & Co Imprint: WW Norton & Co Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.614kg ISBN: 9780393049350ISBN 10: 0393049353 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 29 July 2008 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Inactive Availability: In Print Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsPointed contrasting portraits of the pioneering investigative journalist and the titan of industry.Weinberg (Journalism/Univ. of Missouri; Telling the Untold Story: How Investigative Reporters are Changing the Craft of Biography, 1992, etc.) recounts the connections that both figures had with the oil industry: Tarbell (1857 - 1944) grew up around the oil fields of Titusville, Pa., and witnessed the effects on her father's small business of the growing trust established by Rockefeller (1839 - 1937). The author contrasts their childhoods: Rockefeller's was unstable, his mother harsh, his father a conman and a bigamist; Tarbell had a traditional middle-class background. Weinberg shows Rockefeller struggling to get an education and Tarbell becoming a biology major at Allegheny College, the only female graduate in the class of 1880. He then follows Tarbell's subsequent career as editor and reporter for the Chautauquan, her years as a freelance journalist in Paris and her move to New York City to become an editor and investigative journalist for McClure's magazine. (Rockefeller mostly drops out of the narrative here.) After producing two circulation-boosting series on Napoleon and Lincoln, she tackled Standard Oil, writing a serialized expose of the trust's business practices that when published in book form became her most famous work, The History of the Standard Oil Company. The author details Tarbell's painstaking research into government documents, court records, newspaper files and church records, as well as her extensive interviews with Standard Oil executive Henry Rogers; extensive quotations reveal the eloquence and clarity of her prose. Tarbell's investigation, Weinberg reminds us, aroused public resentment against Rockefeller and Standard Oil that led to the government's legal actions against the petroleum trust and eventually to its breakup in 1911.Rockefeller remains a sketchy figure, but Tarbell emerges as a remarkably intelligent, diligent and principled woman with great independence of spirit. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationThe author of six books, Steve Weinberg has been a longtime board member of the National Book Critics Circle and currently teaches investigative journalism at the University of Missouri Journalism School. He lives in Columbia, Missouri. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |