The Edinburgh History of Scottish Newspapers, 1850-1950 / / W. Hamish Fraser.

Presents the first comprehensive examination of daily and weekly newspapers in Scotland in the century after 1850Considers the city-based daily papers and the many local weeklies, which were the most extensively read papers throughout most of the period, containing international and national comment...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter EBOOK PACKAGE COMPLETE 2023 English
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Place / Publishing House:Edinburgh : : Edinburgh University Press, , [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource (528 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
CONTENTS --
PREFACE --
Chapter One THE SCOTTISH PRESS, 1850–1900 --
PAPERS FOR THE PEOPLE --
Chapter Two GLASGOW DAILIES --
Chapter Three GLASGOW’S WEEKLY PAPERS --
Chapter Four EDINBURGH: THE 1850s AND 1860s --
Chapter Five EDINBURGH’S SCOTSMAN AND ITS CHALLENGERS --
Chapter Six DUNDEE --
Chapter Seven ABERDEEN --
Chapter Eight THE NORTH-EAST COUNTIES --
Chapter Nine PERTHSHIRE, KINROSS-SHIRE AND ANGUS --
Chapter Ten LOTHIANS, FIFE AND STIRLINGSHIRE --
Chapter Eleven LANARKSHIRE AND CLYDESIDE --
Chapter Twelve AYRSHIRE, DUMFRIES, GALLOWAY AND THE BORDERS --
Chapter Thirteen HIGHLANDS AND NORTHERN ISLANDS --
MAKING A NEWSPAPER --
Chapter Fourteen PROPRIETORS, EDITORS AND JOURNALISTS --
Chapter Fifteen FILLING THE PAGES --
Chapter Sixteen GETTING IT OUT THERE --
MAKING THE NEWS --
Chapter Seventeen A LIBERAL NATION --
Chapter Eighteen NOT IRELAND --
Chapter Nineteen A PROTESTANT PEOPLE --
Chapter Twenty THE LURE OF EMPIRE --
Chapter Twenty-One SCOTTISH IDENTITY --
TWENTIETH CENTURY --
Chapter Twenty-Two THE COMPLEXITIES OF OWNERSHIP --
Chapter Twenty-Three COPING WITH THE NEW --
Chapter Twenty-Four CONCLUSION --
BIBLIOGRAPHY --
GENERAL INDEX --
INDEX OF PEOPLE
Summary:Presents the first comprehensive examination of daily and weekly newspapers in Scotland in the century after 1850Considers the city-based daily papers and the many local weeklies, which were the most extensively read papers throughout most of the period, containing international and national commentary as well as local reportsCaptures the tone of the papers by focusing on such issues as the American Civil War, parliamentary reform, changing attitudes to politics, empire and social change Considers issues that were regarded as being distinctively Scottish such as attitudes towards education, democracy and religion and how far Scottish newspapers contributed or undermined to the idea of a distinct Scottish identityExamines growth of group ownership of Scottish papers in the 20th century and the reduced role of the local weekly press in shaping opinion and the extent of how far, by the 1940s, papers had changed from those in the 19th centuryFilling a significant gap in the history of the Scottish press and in Scottish social history, this book draws on a range of sources. It examines the great expansion of Scottish newspapers, following the removal of the ‘taxes on knowledge’ through to the mid-20th century.W. Hamish Fraser provides the historical basis for meaningful, in-depth study of many different aspects of the Scottish press and adds a new dimension to Scottish historical studies. Through an extensive search of newspapers, the use of local history material and of the limited business and organisational records that are available, he gathers little-known information on the world of Scottish journalism and on the people who provided the mass of the population with their news and tried to shape their attitudes. By focusing on different regions, he moves away from earlier rather sweeping generalisations on a key part of the media in Scotland, and he assesses the extent of continuity and change in a crucial century.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9781399511551
9783111319292
9783111318912
9783111319131
9783111318189
9783110797640
DOI:10.1515/9781399511551
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: W. Hamish Fraser.