Seib, P. (2004). Beyond the front lines: How the news media cover a
world shaped by war. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 185 pages.
Palmer, N. (Ed.). (2003). Terrorism, war, and the press. Hollis,
NH: Hollis. 316 pages.
It is no surprise that several books focusing on war, terrorism,
and the media would appear after the tragedy of September 11,2001, and
the Iraq War. These events provide several new chapters in the annals of
media's ongoing battle with governments and on the strengths and
weaknesses of media coverage during times of crisis.
Phillip Seib's book, Beyond the Front Lines: How the News
Media Cover a World Shaped by War is one of the best. Seib, who has had
both a distinguished reporting and academic career with several books
under his belt, knows just the right balance to strike when interpreting
journalistic issues of the day for a broader audience. His book is an
impressive assortment of well-researched, well-sourced topics that all
merit attention.
Seib talks fluently about the American media's unilateral
withdrawal from the scene as world news-gathering organizations, the
effects of a continuing news cycle in a cable network and Internet
world, the realities of reporting sanitized and preemptive wars, a
critique of embedding journalists, Team Pentagon's impressive PR
machine, the symbiosis between journalists and the intelligence
community, the effects of technology on terrorism and war coverage, the
impact of bloggers and Smart-mobbers on mainstream media,
cyberterrorism, the growth and impact of Al-Jazeera and other
non-Western sources of news, and how media should cover public
diplomacy.
In each case, Seib provides sound, journalistic-style coverage and
multiple sources to back up his arguments. Seib is consistently critical
of the Bush administration's policies in this book, but the work is
certainly not a polemic. Seib marshals the evidence carefully and gives
attention to both sides of an issue. When he does take a stand, it is a
principled, well-documented one.
Seib has judiciously edited himself so that only the most important
bits that move the book forward are included. Students will find that
each of his topics contains just enough information to illuminate and
substantiate but never enough detail to bore or stray to tangents.
Seib's book on coverage of war and terrorism is well suited
for upper division courses that concentrate on media criticism or media
and society. It touches as many bases as one could possibly hope for
with a topical book like this. Students will find the book readable,
persuasive, and self-contained and will come away with a much more
thoughtful, comprehensive view of how media have or have not responded
to the challenges they have faced already in the 21st century. The only
ones likely to be disappointed will be graduate students or faculty
looking for a deeper treatment of the arguments or a more theoretical
orientation.
Terrorism, War, and the Press, edited by Nancy Palmer, Executive
Director of the Joan Shorenstein Barone Center on the Press, Politics,
and Public Policy at Harvard, is a collection of essays that were
written previously over the past decade by Fellows of the Shorenstein
Center and have been assembled for this volume. Dusting off some old
essays and repackaging them would not ordinarily make for a stimulating,
cohesive reading; however, this volume has redeeming qualities. It
features a good mix of prominent journalists and academics. Because the
journalists had the luxury of being in residence when they wrote their
pieces, their work is far more extensive and well researched than one
would expect. Nick Gowing of the BBC, for example, weighed in with 441
footnotes for his chapter.
A refreshing aspect of this book is that it is truly international
in scope and does not assume that terrorism began on September 11th. The
situations in Northern Ireland and Israel get just as prominent
attention as the internal threats to America. Likewise, the war in
Serbia almost gets comparable coverage to the war in Iraq. There is also
an insightful essay comparing the response to the World Trade Center
bombing by the media in South Asia (India and Pakistan) to that of the
United States--an illuminating contrast, indeed. Any time these
forgotten parts of the world are put on center stage, American students
of media are better for it. Truly, this volume provides a multivoiced,
multicultural, multifaceted global perspective on coverage of terrorism
and war.
Some of the essays fall into the rut of being myopic journalistic
accounts that become quite stale once the initial event reported has
passed. Yet, some of the essays transcend their time-based environment
to make more far-reaching philosophical and theoretical statements about
the state of journalism in America and around the world. One in
particular focuses on the motivations to influence media by those who
are the underdogs fighting against powerful states, whether these
underdogs are protesters, citizens in occupied states, terrorists,
revolutionaries, or weaker combatants in state-to-state conflicts. Gadi
Wolfsfeld, an Israeli academic, systematically lays out a framework for
determining whether the media will play an independent role or be
subservient to the powerful party in a dispute between unequal parties.
Factors include the powerful antagonist's ability to initiate and
control events, their ability to regulate the flow of information, and
the degree of political dispute among elites on the powerful
party's side. Even though this essay was written more than a decade
ago just after the first Gulf War, it certainly rings true in the
current environment where unequal conflicts predominate.
Another valuable contribution is a content analysis of coverage of
terrorism before September 11th. It shows that the New York Times and
Washington Post did indeed devote quite a bit of coverage to terrorism
during the years leading up to 2001 and discussed the threat of a direct
attack to America but gave far less coverage to terrorism's
underlying causes and the frustrations being experienced in the Islamic
world. It also shows that heavyweight terrorism coverage in the elite
press slowed to a trickle when it filtered down to the local level.
This essay points out that there was considerable activity within
the academic community that focused on a variety of angles concerning
terrorism and homeland security. Yet journalism did a poor job of
discovering and translating those academic findings and perspectives
into well-sourced, objective news coverage. Implied in the essay is the
need for a new strand of journalism that can tap into this intellectual
pipeline and convey substantive information to the public. With news
gathering having become so anemic in the international arena, creative
initiatives are desperately needed if the news media are to remain
global players.
Both of these books make a strong case for shifting resources from
news processing to news gathering and for developing alternative
news-gathering techniques to offset the appalling shrinkage of global
news-gathering capabilities.
Joe Foote (Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin) is the Edward L.
Gaylord Chair in the Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass
Communication at the University of Oklahoma. His research interest
concerns international media.
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