Book Review[s] – The Mind of a Journalist & Telling Our Stories

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The Mind of a Journalist: How Reporters View Themselves, Their World, and Their Craft. Jim Willis (2010).Los Angeles: Sage Publications. pp. 264.

Telling Our Stories: The Days of the Baltimore Sun. May 2010, http:// wbng.org/stories/ (accessed July 22, 2010).

Two recent works, a book and a Web site, may be useful supplementary texts for educators looking to explore the values, worldview, and socialization of journalists.

The Mind of a Journalist is a slim textbook that features interviews with a dozen journalists on the attraction of journalism and the values that shape the craft, along with topical issues such as anonymous sources, the journalist as a celebrity, and the influence of religious faith on reporting.

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Book Review – Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America

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Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America. Elizabeth Fraterrigo. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2009. 320 pp.

Hugh Hefner’s Playboy, founded in 1953, has been subjected to extensive analysis and criticism from the likes of feminist scholar Andrea Dworkin, the new journalism of Gay Talese, and Hefner biographer Steven Watts. So, is there anything more to be said about this magazine? Fortunately for Elizabeth Fraterrigo, the answer is yes.

Fraterrigo, an assistant professor of history at Loyola University in Chicago, uses old issues of Playboy, newspaper articles, Hefner’s scrapbooks, letters, and an interview with Hefner himself to illuminate a transitional time in America when women were entering the workforce, demanding equal pay, and taking on roles once occupied solely by males. She argues convincingly that Playboy promoted a model of masculinity that emphasized bachelorhood, apartment-living, and pro-miscuity in opposition to the traditional 1950s ideal of marriage, two children, and a suburban house. At the same time, Fraterrigo argues that Hefner’s philosophy of uninhibited sexuality was also in line with mainstream society because the goal of “prolonged bachelorhood,” in Hefner’s opinion, was to “ultimately strengthen marital bonds.”

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Book Review – Digital Review of Asia Pacific 2007-2008

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Digital Review of Asia Pacific 2007-2008. Felix Librero and Patricia B. Arinto, eds. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2008. 382 pp.

The third edition of the biennial Digital Review of Asia Pacific, edited by Felix Librero and Patricia B. Arinto, makes a strong contribution to the scant literature available on information technology for development (ICT4D) in Asia. As the lead editor of Cyberpath to Development in Asia: Issues and Challenges (2002), I am aware that there continues to be a great need to make more information available on the subject of new media in Asia.

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Book Review – Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age

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Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age. Clay Shirky. New York, NY: Penguin, 2010. 242 pages.

It sometimes seems that the hardest thing to do in the Information Age is to communicate.

In the rush of easily accessible data and the maelstrom of conflicting viewpoints, two otherwise intelligent people can talk past one another as they stake out territory with the tenacity of computer viruses. NYU professor Clay Shirky and media critic Nicholas Carr have been squaring off now for two years over what impact the Internet is having on our society. Shirky takes the more optimistic viewpoint, Carr the more pessimistic. [Read more...]