THE MEDIA OF THE REPUBLIC
Gerard Charles (Wilson)
ISBN 1 876262 06 0 pb 235x155mm 288pp, 1999, $9.95
Though published in 1999, The Media of the Republic presents
issues about the media that are very much current. Analysing the way the
media dealt with the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, the author first
sketches the philosophical assumptions that form the backdrop to the media
reporting. Those assumptions are now easily recognisable as the foundations
of Political Correctness. He then shows how those assumptions
give rise to a politically correct agenda which is continually imposed upon the
reporting of the accident and its aftermath. That politically correct agenda, however,
is not just to
defend a particular political position, important as it is in itself. It is primarily to defend the
commercial interests of the great media groups. This is not a 'Diana' book;
it is a book about the power and influence of the those groups.
The examination takes in a range of media activity but the concentration is on the daily editions of one particular Murdoch newspaper
(The Australian) during the period 1 September to 9 September 1997. The
Australian is not only a stallion from the stables of a worldwide media
empire but, as the author claims, is representative of the general media reaction to
Diana’s death.
The examination is unrelenting and plenty of evidence and argument are
produced to justify the sometimes startling exposure of the media’s tactics
and objectives. The Media of the Republic is an uncompromising attack on
some of the major degenerative elements of modern society.
The author’s second book, The Telecard Affair: Diary of a Media Lynching,
follows The Media of the Republic concentrating on the tactics and forms of
arguments the media deploy in their reporting rather than on ideological
assumptions.
TO ORDER: Email your order (gerardwilson01@optusnet.com.au)
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Read the following reviews:
John Young,
News Weekly
Sam Roggeveen,
Quadrant
Tony Abbott,
Adelaide Review
Don McLean,
Catholic