Description
About the Author
Donald Ritchie has been Associate Historian of the United States Senate for almost three decades. A past president of the Oral History Association, he is the author of Doing Oral History, American Journalists: Getting the Story, and Press Gallery: Congress and the Washington Correspondents. He is a popular public speaker and a frequent commentator on C-SPAN.
Reviews
"A superb new history of the Washington press corps."--Frank Rich, New York Times
"A fascinating, meticulously documented look at some of the profession's defining moments and battles. Ritchie, a longtime historian for the U.S. Senate, writes with a journalist's eye for conflict, character and the dramatic details that make larger stories come alive--reviving long-forgotten conflicts, resignations and romances.... Sprinkled throughout is a treasure trove of pithy quotes from some of journalism's most prominent practitioners, praising, explaining and (plus ca change) disparaging their chosen profession and colleagues."--Garance Franke-Ruta, Washington Post Book World
"Engrossing.... Should remind sky-is-falling press critics there is little new in the current trend toward ideological reporting and attack-dog journalism.... Sizzling...a kind of press corps confidential."--Columbia Journalism Review
"Covers almost every issue relevant to the growth and change of American media in the modern era, from FDR's revolutionary use of radio to an analysis of media coverage of 9/11. Drawing on oral histories, broadcast archives, presidential papers, memoirs and interviews, Ritchie describes the rise of the wire services, racial integration of the press corps, the role of foreign correspondents, the rise of opinion columnists, the use of 'leaks,' the growth of television, the challenges of cable news networks and, finally, the impact of the Internet on news reporting."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A real treat.. Over the course of some 270-some-oddly compelling pages, he proceeds to tell the reader everything one could conceivably want to know about practicing journalism in a city where there are 5 journalists for every elected official. While technically focused on the nation's capitol, his book more broadly tells the evolution of the news industry, including the major newspapers, wire services, the witch hunts, and he masterfully explores the arrival and (very) grudging eventual acceptance of radio, television, women, and minority reporters over many decades."--FishbowlDC
"This is a finely crafted book by a skilled writer and top-notch historian well qualified to write authoritatively about the Washington press corps. He has been a student of the press and a colleague of working reporters for much of his professional career, and he has successfully mined an incredible array of existing sources and original research to synthesize a coherent, tightly written history that is a delight to read."--Mary Kay Quinlan, former president, National Press Club
"Thoughtful.... Full of good dish about the likes of Lippman and the Alsops. Of much interest of students of national politics and the media."--Kirkus Reviews
"'Reporting From Washington' makes one thing clear: The glory days of Washington reporting never really existed. There were always journalists who engaged in back-scratching and dubious sourcing. The best of them loomed larger than life, outlasting the presidents they covered."--Jonathan Karl, Wall Street Journal
"Ritchie presents a rich perspective on the people who write the first draft of history, investigating and then breaking the Teapot Dome and Watergate scandals, among others. He also chronicles the changes in the makeup of the press corps and its relationship with Washington power brokers."--Booklist
"In Reporting from Washington, Donald Ritchie has written a wise and perceptive book filled with insights into the fascinating interaction between politicians and the Washington press corps-and into how that relationship has evolved over the decades."--Robert Caro, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Years of Lyndon Johnson
"Well-researched and equally well-written.... A perceptive and balanced account covering issues ranging from the grudging acceptance of women by the National Press Club to the birth of the Internet and its impact on traditional news coverage.... Plumbs memoirs, oral histories, broadcast archives, interviews and other sources for a rich lode of anecdotes and information."--Sacramento Bee
"No one comes close to Donald Ritchie in command of the literature on the Washington press corps, and in Reporting from Washington he has broken new ground with his awesome research. His chapter on the black press is eye-opening; he is fascinating on correspondents from abroad; and he is able to take an overworked topic such as McCarthyism and present it as though the reader were coming on it for the first time. There is not a dull paragraph in the book." --William Leuchtenburg, William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
"Donald A Ritchie's Reporting from Washington is an impressive blend of authority and style, telling the history of the modern Washington press corps with a journalist's knack for the arresting detail and a scholar's concern for context and meaning. It makes a major contribution to our understanding of a central force in American public life, and will prove an invaluable resource for anyone seeking to understand how the United States is governed." --Evan W. Cornog, Publisher, Columbia Journalism Review, and Associate Dean for Planning and Policy, Columbia Journalism School
Book Information
ISBN 9780195308921
Author Donald A. Ritchie
Format Paperback
Page Count 432
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 556g
Dimensions(mm) 145mm * 218mm * 31mm