FALL 2007 HONORS COURSES

HONR 248O The Military and the Media in American History
Thursday, 5:00-7:30 p.m.
Dr. William Hammond, Senior Lecturer in University Honors; Chief, General Histories Branch, U.S. Army Center of Military History

The free press has always posed problems for armies in time of war. Soldiers contend that their lives depend upon their right to withhold information from the enemy. Reporters respond that, however important the rights of soldiers, they may have to yield before the need of a free people to scrutinize the deeds of its government. At times, the conflicts that have emerged between these two opposing points of view, as in the case of the Vietnam War, have seemed almost to overshadow the world events that gave them birth. The problem shows no sign of disappearing, if only because the dangers to free societies from within and without are such that liberty itself cannot apparently exist without the presence of both a vigorous military and a largely unbridled press.

This course will investigate the relationship between the military and the media by applying the traditional journalistic questions–who, what, when, where, how, and why–both to the news business and to the business of making war. Examining the technology of journalism as it evolved during the 19th and 20th centuries, often hand in hand with the changing technology of war, participants will ask such questions as: What is it that journalists do? How has it changed over the years? How does it relate to what soldiers do? Does it make the military and the news media implacable enemies? If so, does a community of interests nevertheless exist between the two that subtly shapes the information we receive in press reports?

Participants will be exposed to readings from classical texts, the work of modern researchers in the social sciences, unpublished government documents, a broad range of examples printed for broadcast in various media outlets, and guest speakers representing the diverse points of view under discussion. The course will call upon you to examine specific instances of controversial news reporting during the last forty years, to communicate your findings in class discussions, and to write a research paper on your conclusions. Grades will depend upon the quality of the papers submitted, class participation, and a final essay examination designed to distill conclusions and insights.

Readings:
Walter Millis, Arms and Men; Fialka, Hotel Warriors
Phillip Knightley, The First Casualty: From the Crimea to Vietnam, The War Correspondent as Hero, Propagandist, & Myth Maker
Daniel Hallin, The "Uncensored War": The Media & Vietnam

CORE–Social or Political History [SH]







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