Embedded: The Media At War in Iraq |
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You Are Here: Home > History Books > Media History > Item 193
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Embedded: The Media At War in Iraq
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by Bill Katovsky and Timothy Carlson
Sales Rank: 457901

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$0.42
At Amazon on 11-18-2008.

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Features
Cover Type: Hard Cover with 450 pages
Published by: The Lyons PressEdition: 1st Edition September 2003
Written in: English
ISBN 10 Number: 1592282652
ISBN 13 Number: 978-1592282654
Book Dimensions:
9.4 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
Weighs: 1.7 pounds
Product Review
In comparison to the Gulf War of 1991, in which the Pentagon controlled the news as tightly as possible, the war of 2003 was a wide-open affair for reporters. This was partly done to counteract propaganda coming from the Iraqi government; it was also an attempt to control and influence the news by keeping journalists under close watch. To this end, the Pentagon developed a "slick new public relations concept known as embedding." (xiii galley) Embedded journalists lived, ate, and traveled with the troops. They also came under enemy fire with the troops. In fact, as a group, the roughly 2,700 journalists in Iraq were more likely to be killed in combat than the quarter million American and British soldiers. Traveling with troops was generally safer and afforded better access, but what about journalistic ethics? That is question at the core of this fascinating book and one proves to have many different answers. Embedded is a collection of interviews conducted between April and June 2003 of sixty journalists, public affairs officers, and freelance photographers from a wide range of print, television, and radio sources. Their stories convey information, impressions, and anecdotes that could not be included in their official reports and are therefore quite revealing. They confront not only the risks, and allure, of reporting from a combat zone, but of getting too close to the story to remain objective (if true objectivity is even possible). This personal and often moving collection offers great insight into the most covered war in history. --Shawn Carkonen
From Booklist
This collection of the stories behind the stories of the Iraqi war offers a rich and revealing look at emotions and images rarely seen in news reporting. Katovsky and Carlson interviewed sixty leading journalists who lived, ate, and traveled with U.S. troops. They begin with a brief history of the relationship between the military and the media and a discussion of the practice of embedding reporters, detailing the pros (greater access and immediacy of reporting) and cons (the greater risks to reporters' lives and their ability to be objective). The interviews include CBS News' Jim Axelrod, who is still mourning the loss of his colleague David Bloom, and Peter Baker of the Washington Post, who recalls the strain of covering a battle while worrying about his wife, Susan Glasser, who was also reporting from Iraq. Recollections range from the raw fear provoked by close calls in the battlefield to the boredom of daily briefings at the CENTCOM media center in Doha, Qatar. Vanessa Bush Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Reader Reviews This is a fascinating book. Skip the intro, which is too long and reads like a college paper, and dive right into the action. It's uncomfortable, nerve-wracking reading- these reporters' stories take you right to the front lines amid the chaos and the noise. Michael Herr's Dispatches was a great book, but it offered only one perspective. This book presents dozens from all over the globe, both men and women, Arabic press and US Army videographers. Most importantly, each person speaks from the heart. (My favorite was Evan Wright, the Rolling Stone reporter. He is a funny and insightful guy who doesn't take himself too seriously.) When I first heard the media would be "embedded", I thought oh no, that means "co-opted", stuck in the rear under a watchful military eye. This book demonstrates that that was not the case. These reporters were given, and/or took, the freedom they needed to send very accurate reports of this war, direct from the battlefield. They took great risks to do it, and for that I am grateful to them.
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Embedded: The Media At War in Iraq
Available from Amazon
Price: $0.42
Updated on 11-18-2008.

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