Bylines in Despair
Herbert Hoover, the Great Depression, and the U.S. News Media
- 256 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Through a long public life and short presidency, Herbert Hoover carefully cultivated reporters and media owners as he rose from a relief administrator to president of the United States. During his service to government, he held the conviction that journalists were to be manipulated and mistrusted. When the nation fell into economic disaster, Hoover's misconceptions about the press and press relations exacerbated a national calamity. This book traces the entire history of Hoover's relationship with magazines, newspapers, newsreel organizations, and radio, and demonstrates how an attitude toward the U.S. press can help or hinder a public figure throughout his career. The book draws upon diaries of Hoover aides, oral histories from journalists and other media figures, newspaper and magazine clippings, radio broadcasts, newsreels, public documents, archival manuscripts, and a plethora of published secondary books and articles. This may be the most complete and best-documented study of a single president and the media.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- 1. The Unlikely Road to Success
- 2. Secretary of Commerce
- 3. The Campaign and Aftermath of the 1928 Election
- 4. Lost Opportunities
- 5. The Crash
- 6. Radio, Newsreels, Newspapers, and the Presidency
- 7. The Bonus March
- 8. The Dawn of the Roosevelt Era
- Epilogue
- Selected Bibliography
- Index