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WEIR OF THE NEWS:: yesterday's mediaman

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 January 1977

26

Abstract

THE INTER‐RELATIONSHIPS between the flowering of the fourth estate and popular literature, the democratisation of the reading public, and the growth of radicalism in the first half of the nineteenth century have been long recognised. Yet although literary and political historians have dug deeply and frequently in the periodical press of the time for evidence of contemporary attitudes, less attention has been paid to the journalists whose output is represented. It is unsafe to assume that they were typified by literary giants like Dickens (whose editorship of the Daily news was at best undistinguished) or by those who subsequently produced autobiographical accounts. Most were comparatively faceless men, whose social, educational, literary, and political backgrounds can be discovered only through extensive research. Until numerous bio‐bibliographies are compiled on an individual basis, generalisations about the profession as a whole will remain tenuous. William Weir, editor of the Daily news in 1854–58, was one of this powerful new group of substantially‐neglected communicators, but in his case a unique if scattered range of sources permits a reconstruction of the apprenticeship of a Victorian journalist and some interesting insights into the profession.

Citation

CAMERON, K. (1977), "WEIR OF THE NEWS:: yesterday's mediaman", Library Review, Vol. 26 No. 1, pp. 29-38. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012652

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1977, MCB UP Limited

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