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"PM" : A New Deal in Journalism

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This book is the story of PM, an upstart New York tabloid newspaper, that from 1940 to 1948 unashamedly and outspokenly championed the causes of minorities, workers, the downtrodden, and the disfranchised.

Throughout its eight year life, PM maintained a circulation of 150,000.

It crusaded against crass materialism and isolationism, advocated the continuation of New Deal policies, and strove to build anti-fascist alliances.

The tabloid also gained its reputation by revolutionizing the use of photography and graphics, breaking an industry boycott by printing daily news of radio programming, focusing on consumer news, and rejecting all paid advertising to avoid compromising its views.

Its influence did not die with its last issue, however.

In the sixties, PM was seen as a model for several upstart counterculture publications, and many of its stylistic innovations can be found in current newspapers, including the New York Times. -- First book to recount the history of this tabloid newspaper. -- Story told against the backdrop of political and cultural landscape of the 1930s and 1940s.

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Product Details
Rutgers University Press
0813524342 / 9780813524344
Hardback
071.471
31/07/1997
United States
240 pages, 15 b&w illustrations
163 x 230 mm, 667 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More