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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
Bernstein, Joanne E. – Death Education, 1979
Literature for young people that allows issues related to death and suicide to be addressed openly included nonfiction material from various vantage points: anthropology, biology, ecology, theology, thanatology, and more. Exploration of grief and mourning are accomplished in a manner that is scholarly and compassionate. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Children, Childrens Literature, Death
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
Brown, Donal – Communication: Journalism Education Today (C:JET), 1986
Offers a method for teaching students about ethical journalism and new journalism using a favorite short story and asking questions such as "How is truth in fiction different from the truth in a news story?" (SRT)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Journalism Education, New Journalism
Gutkind, Lee – 1996
Defining the genre of creative nonfiction as where writing and journalistic reporting merge, this guide shows that aspiring journalists, essayists, and biographers do not need to stifle their creativity to succeed in the craft of writing. The guide teaches young writers how to use creative nonfiction to its full effect, writing the truth in a way…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Audience Awareness, Creative Expression, Independent Study
Johnson, Michael L. – 1971
The term "New Journalism" refers to a different style of journalistic writing which is based on a renewed commitment to principles of honesty and thoroughness and which encourages writers to exercise the freedom of a new subjective, creative, and candid style of reportage and commentary. The significance of New Journalism as a mode of…
Descriptors: Black Power, Journalism, Literary Styles, Mass Media
Lehman, Daniel W. – 1997
Taking off from the perception that the current critical climate blurs most meaningful distinctions between fiction and nonfiction, this book examines what happens when writers and readers encounter texts presented as nonfiction--texts that make some truth claim on outside experience, texts whose characters and events have at least some tangible…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Fiction, Higher Education, Interpretive Skills