- EAN13
- 9782814305595
- ISBN
- 978-2-8143-0559-5
- Éditeur
- Presses universitaires de Nancy - Editions Universitaires de Lorraine
- Date de publication
- 09/07/2020
- Collection
- Regards croisés sur le monde anglophone
- Nombre de pages
- 244
- Dimensions
- 16 cm
- Poids
- 430 g
- Langue
- anglais
- Fiches UNIMARC
- S'identifier
Literary Journalism and Civil War
Periodismo literario y guerra civil
Autres contributions de Juan Antonio García Galindo
Presses universitaires de Nancy - Editions Universitaires de Lorraine
Regards croisés sur le monde anglophone
Offres
There are few events in human history that leave a wound as deep and as
lasting as a civil war. Literary journalism has proven over time to be one of
the best ways to address the moral ambivalence of reporting on these events.
It is not enough to position yourself on one side or another because sometimes
we do not even know who the enemy is. The reportage genre shows ways in which
these questions can be answered, through a subjective and immersive style that
accounts for all the faces of the conflict. Throughout the 19th, 20th and 21th
centuries, there have been numerous authors who used literary journalism to
document these conflicts: Santiago Masferrer i Cantó, Manuel Chaves Nogales,
Mário Neves, Peter Wellington Alexander, Martha Gellhorn, Hilde Marchant,
Scott Anderson and Joe Sacco. The vision that these authors project shows the
ability of literary journalism to portray the best and worst of human nature.
lasting as a civil war. Literary journalism has proven over time to be one of
the best ways to address the moral ambivalence of reporting on these events.
It is not enough to position yourself on one side or another because sometimes
we do not even know who the enemy is. The reportage genre shows ways in which
these questions can be answered, through a subjective and immersive style that
accounts for all the faces of the conflict. Throughout the 19th, 20th and 21th
centuries, there have been numerous authors who used literary journalism to
document these conflicts: Santiago Masferrer i Cantó, Manuel Chaves Nogales,
Mário Neves, Peter Wellington Alexander, Martha Gellhorn, Hilde Marchant,
Scott Anderson and Joe Sacco. The vision that these authors project shows the
ability of literary journalism to portray the best and worst of human nature.
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