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Kallan, Richard A. – Journal of Popular Culture, 1975
Provides a brief sketch of the essential characteristics of new journalism, offers a rationale for calling it "new," and differentiates the new nonfiction from the broader concept of new journalism. See CS 702 359 for availability information.(RB)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Devices, New Journalism, News Reporting
Kallan, Richard A. – 1977
Tom Wolfe is widely regarded as the leading theorist and practitioner of New Journalism, the journalistic genre that combines the stylistic features of fiction and the reportorial obligations of journalism to produce a "novelistic sounding" but nonetheless factual literature. The saliency of Wolfe's stylistic boldness has prompted many…
Descriptors: Journalism, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices, New Journalism
Berner, R. Thomas – 1986
Claiming that literary newswriting is not a contradiction in terms, that is, an oxymoron, this essay examines some of the criteria against which literary newswriting can be measured, defines what constitutes literary newswriting in contemporary newspapers, and explains how it contributes to modern newswriting. The paper argues that (1) modern…
Descriptors: Journalism, Literary Devices, Literary Styles, New Journalism
Wilkins, Lee – 1983
The New Journalism, which uses literary techniques usually restricted to fiction, has been categorized and analyzed from a number of perspectives, but little effort has been made to delineate its intellectual and philosophical roots. The New Journalism arose from the intellectual tradition of Romanticism, as opposed to Classicism, the movement…
Descriptors: Intellectual History, Literary Devices, Literary Styles, New Journalism
Pikuleff, Michael – Catholic School Editor, 1974
Summarizes many of the characteristics of new journalism as highlighted by Tow Wolfe and E. W. Johnson in "The New Journalism", discusses several definitions of new journalism, and predicts that one trend new journalism will take in the future is to develop men's liberation as a subject. (RB)
Descriptors: Definitions, Higher Education, Literary Devices, New Journalism
Zeller, Nancy – 1991
It is argued that expressive writing strategies, particularly those used by New Journalists, may eventually serve as models for case reporting in social science research. New Journalism refers to a movement begun in the 1960's that strives to reveal the story hidden beneath surface facts. It involves the use of fictive techniques applied to the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Data Analysis, Evaluation Methods, Literary Devices
Murphy, James E. – 1974
Addressing the question of the usefulness of the concept of New Journalism, this study also seeks to define the essential characteristics of New Journalism and to determine whether, in fact, there is such a thing. The first chapter reviews the critical literature of New Journalism, sorting out some of the many uses of the term, then narrowing the…
Descriptors: Definitions, Higher Education, Journalism, Literary Devices
Skrebels, Paul – 2003
The net effect of the early experiences of writing "compositions" which involved either describing the circumstances of a student's life or recounting the kinds of events encapsulated in that proverbially hack title, "What I Did on My Summer Vacation," has been a tendency for older teachers to devalue nonfiction as an object of…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Literary Devices, Literary Genres