Banner Text

Banner Slogan

Member Login
User Name:
Password:
Register
Transatlantic Publishers Group Ltd.
Box 242
235 Earls Court Road
London SW5 9FE
United Kingdom
Tel +44 (0) 207373 2515
Fax +44 (0) 207244 1018
Email Us

Shooting the Messenger

Back

Shooting the Messenger

As the literature on military-media relations grows, it is informed by antagonism either from journalists who report on wars or from ex-soldiers in their memoirs. Academics who attempt more judicious accounts rarely have any professional military or media experience.

A working knowledge of the operational constraints of both professions underscores Shooting the Messenger. A veteran war correspondent and think tank director, Paul L. Moorcraft has served in the British Ministry of Defence, while historian-by-training Philip M. Taylor is a professor of international communications who has lectured widely to the U.S. military and at NATO institutions. Some of the topics they examine in this wide-ranging history of military-media relations are:

– the interface between soldiers and civilian reporters covering conflicts
– the sometimes grey area between reporters’ right or need to know and the operational security constraints imposed by the military
– the military’s manipulation of journalists who accept it as a trade-off for safer battlefield access
– the resultant gap between images of war and their reality
– the evolving nature of media technology and the difficulties—and opportunities—this poses to the military
– journalistic performance in reporting conflict as an observer or a participant

Moorcraft and Taylor provide a bridge over which each side can pass and a path to mutual understanding.

Product Code Description Attributes Price 
ISBN 978-1-57488-947-5 Paperback Paul L. Moorcraft and Philip M. Taylor £18.00

In categories:

Potomac Books Inc

Prices include:

0% VAT