home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: triangle.talks
- Path: sparky!uunet!concert!rock!gilster
- From: gilster@rock.concert.net (Paul A Gilster -- Computer Focus)
- Subject: Society of Professional Journalists Meeting
- Message-ID: <1992Sep11.135447.10249@rock.concert.net>
- Organization: CONCERT-CONNECT -- Public Access UNIX
- Distribution: triangle
- Date: Fri, 11 Sep 1992 13:54:47 GMT
- Lines: 123
-
- "Journalism will continue to be history in a hurry. That is
- the major stumbling block in the path of improvement. Haste
- fights reflection, and unreflective journalism drifts into
- dependence on standard and fashionable story forms." --
- James David Barber in The Pulse of Politics.
-
- Political scientist James David Barber will join the Society
- of Professional Journalists' Triangle Pro Chapter for a
- discussion of the coverage of political campaigns Monday
- evening, Sept. 14 in Durham. With a focus on the
- presidential race, we will examine whether the news media
- are providing Americans with the information they need to
- make intelligent decisions.
-
- The program begins at 7 p.m. in Room 116 of the Old
- Chemistry Building on Duke University's West Campus. The
- program with Barber, like other SPJ programs, will be on the
- record.
-
- Barber is James B. Duke professor of political science at
- Duke and co-chair of the Duke Center for Journalism and
- Communication. Two of his books on presidential politics,
- The Presidential Character: Predicting Performance in the
- White House and The Pulse of Politics, were reissued this
- year. He is writing a new book about democracy.
-
- Barber believes in the importance of what journalists do but
- is often critical of the way we do it. "Journalism is
- essential for democracy and has been from the start," Barber
- says. "It has to do with the consent of the governed. How
- otherwise are [voters] supposed to know what's happening?"
- Unfortunately, Barber says, neither journalism nor democracy
- is working very well.
-
- Democracy is threatened, Barber says, by the increasing
- fragmentation of society. "Journalists need to work on how
- to make knowledge understandable. Why isn't there more
- research as to what comes across to our reader and viewers?
- The vocabulary of journalism should return to what it was in
- New York City in the early 1900s when it was written so it
- could be understood by immigrants."
-
- Barber has practice in doing just that. For several months,
- he worked with Tom Brokaw at NBC rewriting scripts into
- language everyday people could understand.
-
- He also sees as a problem and a puzzle the theatrical nature
- of news coverage, especially on television. "It becomes a
- question of what one knows by what one sees," he says.
- "Impressionism can be false, as it was for Hitler, as it was
- for Harding."
-
- Barber's books include advice to journalists. He advocates,
- for example:
-
- *** Reality over rhetoric. Journalists, he says, should
- continually hold the candidates' visions up against
- contemporary reality.
-
- *** The importance of biography. Through biography, he
- says, we can show the patterns set through a candidate's
- life and understand how he or she would act in public
- office.
-
- *** A holistic approach. "Government works by an endless
- round of negotiation," he writes, so we should press
- candidates to state areas where they agree with others
- either in office or poised for office at a variety of
- levels, and we should focus attention on those individuals
- as well.
-
- Barber looks forward to hearing our thoughts on these and
- other issues, as well as sharing his own, he says. Looking
- back a few years, he recalls weighing the merits of a career
- in journalism versus academia. "I made a line down the
- middle of a legal pad and listed the pluses and minuses of
- each," he said. "Academia won because of one factor --
- tenure. Now I'm not so sure it was a good decision."
-
-
- Everyone is invited to hear Barber speak. The meeting is in
- Room 116 in the Old Chemistry Building on West Campus, not
- far from Duke Chapel.
-
-
- From Raleigh and points east:
-
- 1) Take 1-40 west toward Durham.
-
- 2) Take NC 147 north (Durham freeway). Do not take exit for
- Duke University East Campus. Do take next exit for Elba
- St./Trent Dr., bearing left to turn onto Trent Dr. Go one
- block to Erwin Rd., turn left on Erwin, then take the next
- right on Flowers Dr.
-
- 3) After a short distance, pass the stop-sign intersection,
- take next right up hill through gate (gates are always open
- after 4 p.m.) If this lot is full, go to the lot just below
- it; no ticketing after 4 p.m.
-
- 4) The campus is to your right as you enter the parking lot.
- Walk to your right up to the quad, turn right as you reach
- the quad and walk up the steps to the upper quad. The Old
- Chemistry Building is across the quad. To get to room 116,
- walk straight across the lobby, to door marked 116, then
- down the stairs.
-
-
- From Durham Freeway:
-
- Proceed from #2 above.
-
-
- From Chapel Hill:
-
- 1) Take US 15-501 bypass north.
-
- 2) Exit onto NC 751, turning toward Duke University. Take
- first left on Erwin Rd. (toward Duke Hospital). Go three
- traffic lights until you see Duke Hospital on your right,
- then through one more traffic light (Trent Dr.) After Trent
- Dr., take first right (Flowers Dr.) Then proceed from step
- #4 under directions from Raleigh above.
-