As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives of the 'people', the rise of a free and independent press seemed central to notions of an age of 'improvement'. However, for many politicians, the press remained simply a tool to be exploited in order to advance their political agendas. By examining the relationship between politicians and metropolitan journalism in the mid nineteenth century, this article contrasts the claims of a press growing in confidence with those of an increasingly media-literate political class and argues that the press was in practice far more the instrument of politicians than the rhetoric suggests
This chapter presents findings from a comparative study of a range of UK based newspapers of the nin...
Newspapers, although vital to Europe’s commercial and political culture well before 1789, underwent ...
This article explores how British print media in the late-nineteenth century portrayed and represent...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
Historians recognize the cultural centrality of the newspaper press in Britain, yet very little has ...
The growing importance of the newspaper press in nineteenth-century politics has long been recognize...
Around the turn of the twentieth century, accelerated social, political and technological changes in...
This article argues that while the prolific scholarship on the Victorian press arguably does not con...
This paper considers a topic that has received scant attention in the historiography of public relat...
This paper examines two themes in local government reporting in the nineteenth century – municipal g...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This article shows how perspectives drawn from visual and cultural studies can be used to shed new l...
This chapter explores the language and politics of Reynolds's Newspaper between 1850 and 1879. It a...
This thesis explores the political significance of the Daily Mail, Daily Express and the Daily Mirro...
This chapter presents findings from a comparative study of a range of UK based newspapers of the nin...
Newspapers, although vital to Europe’s commercial and political culture well before 1789, underwent ...
This article explores how British print media in the late-nineteenth century portrayed and represent...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
Historians recognize the cultural centrality of the newspaper press in Britain, yet very little has ...
The growing importance of the newspaper press in nineteenth-century politics has long been recognize...
Around the turn of the twentieth century, accelerated social, political and technological changes in...
This article argues that while the prolific scholarship on the Victorian press arguably does not con...
This paper considers a topic that has received scant attention in the historiography of public relat...
This paper examines two themes in local government reporting in the nineteenth century – municipal g...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This article shows how perspectives drawn from visual and cultural studies can be used to shed new l...
This chapter explores the language and politics of Reynolds's Newspaper between 1850 and 1879. It a...
This thesis explores the political significance of the Daily Mail, Daily Express and the Daily Mirro...
This chapter presents findings from a comparative study of a range of UK based newspapers of the nin...
Newspapers, although vital to Europe’s commercial and political culture well before 1789, underwent ...
This article explores how British print media in the late-nineteenth century portrayed and represent...