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OverviewWilliam F. Woo, born in China, was the first person outside the Pulitzer family to edit the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the first Asian American to edit a major American newspaper. After forty years in the newsroom, Woo embarked on a second career in 1996 teaching journalism at Stanford University, where he wrote weekly informal essays to his students in the same personal style that characterized his columns for the Post-Dispatch . Each made a philosophical point about journalism and society and their delicate relationship over the last half of the twentieth century. Woo was revered as both a writer and a reporter, and this volume collects some of the best of those essays to the next generation of journalists on their craft's high purpose. As inspiration for students from someone who knew the ropes, it distills the essence of the values that define independent journalism while offering them invaluable food for thought about their future professions. The essays touch on a wide range of subjects. Woo reflects on journalism as a public trust, requiring the publication of stories that give readers a better understanding of society and equip them to change it for the better. He also ponders print journalism conducted in the face of broadcast and online competition along with the transformation of newspapers from privately owned to publicly traded companies. Here too are personal reflections on the Pulitzer family's impact on journalism and on the tensions between a journalist's personal and professional life, as well as the conflicts posed by political advocacy versus free speech or a reporter's expertise versus a newspaper's credibility. Woo's idealistic spirit conveys the virtues of his era's newspaper journalism to the next generation of journalists - and most likely to the next generation of news media as well. Even as new students of journalism have an eye on an electronic future, Woo's essays come straight from a newsman's heart and soul to remind them of values worth preserving. Full Product DetailsAuthor: William F. Woo , Philip MeyerPublisher: University of Missouri Press Imprint: University of Missouri Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 15.20cm Weight: 0.333kg ISBN: 9780826217509ISBN 10: 0826217508 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 03 September 2007 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: Out of stock Table of ContentsReviewsExceptional. ... Woo has distilled the essence of the values that define an independent journalism of verification. He has artfully and with an economy of words embedded those values in narrative 'teaching'--or as he calls them--'learning' moments. This work is a great read that will engage and enchant a new generation of aspiring journalists. <p> Exceptional. . . . Woo has distilled the essence of the values that define an independent journalism of verification. He has artfully and with an economy of words embedded those values in narrative 'teaching'--or as he calls them--'learning' moments. This work is a great read that will engage and enchant a new generation of aspiring journalists. --Bill Kovach, coauthor of Elements of Journalism Author InformationWilliam F. Woo (1936-2006) was the Lorry I. Lokey Professor of Journalism at Stanford University. Philip Meyer is Knight Chair and Professor of Journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the author or coeditor of a number of books, including The Vanishing Newspaper: Saving Journalism in the Information Age and Assessing Public Journalism, both available from the University of Missouri Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |