1st Edition

News and the Human Interest Story

Edited By Helen MacGill Hughes Copyright 1980
    347 Pages
    by Routledge

    313 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this account of the growth of newspapers in modern, industrial society, Helen Hughes traces the development of a mass audience through analysis of the origins of the human interest story in the popular ballads of an earlier day. She shows how such commonly found interests as a taste for news of the town, ordinary gossip, and moving or gripping tales with a legendary or mythic quality have reflected the tastes of ordinary folk from the days of illiterate audiences to the present. She explains how these interests ultimately were combined with practical economic and political information to create the substance and demand for a popular press.

    In describing the rise and fall of newspaper empires, each with their special readership attractions, Hughes shows how technological innovation and idiosyncratic creativity were used by owners to capture and hold a reading audience. Once this audience developed, it could be fed a variety of messages—beamed at reinforcing and maintaining both general and specific publics—as well as a view of the world consonant with that of the publisher and major advertisers. Hughes offers a persuasive argument for the continuing viability of this method for combined social control, instruction, and amusement captured by the association of news and the human interest story.

    INTRODUCTION, I. FROM POLITICS TO HuMAN INTEREST, II. THE FRONT PAGE, III. BIG NEWS AND LITTLE NEWS, IV. THE REPORTER AND THE NEWS, V. HUMAN INTEREST, VI. THE BROADSIDE BALLAD, VII. THE NEWS AND THE STORY, VIII. PERENNIAL STORIES, IX. SENSATIONALISM AND THE YELLOW PRESS, X. POPULAR LITERATURE AND THE MORES, BIBLIOGRAPHY, INDEX TO NAMES, SUBJECT INDEX

    Biography

    Helen MacGill Hughes