Eddie Hurt's post in "Reccomend Good Non-Fiction" mentioned the Russell Baker piece piece on A.J. Liebling on the
). In the review, Baker praises Liebling for his "modest journalism" which, Baker asserts, means that the journalist is "merely another frail human, maybe too woefully human to be entirely trustworthy. This meant establishing the individual reporter's presence in the material, in violation of the old rule that the reporter was to be read, but never sensed." This apparently contrasts with the imperial reporting of journalism schools in our post-Watergate world.
There are no doubt problems with modern journalism and Liebling is certainly a great writer, but something about Baker's paternal tsk-tsking (maybe it's just a Russell Baker problem) rubs me the wrong way. So is the Liebling/New Yorker school of "modest journalism" inherently better than muckraking and "objectivity" or is Russell Baker just a conservative, boring old man?
― C0L1N B3CK3TT (Colin Beckett), Sunday, 7 November 2004 06:18 (twenty-one years ago)