Birth of the Newspaper Industry

Monday, March 10, 2014

Denis Mc Quail states in 'Mass Communication Theory' that it was almost two hundred years after the invention of printing before what we now recognize as a prototypical newspaper could be distinguished from the handbills, pamphlets and newsletters of the late 16th and early 17th centuries.

According to Mc Quail the newspaper was more of an innovation-the invention of a new literary, social and cultural form-even if it might not have been so perceived at the time. Its distinctiveness, compared with other forms of cultural communication, lies in its orientation to the individual reader, reality-orientation, utility, disposability, secularity and suitability for the needs of a new class: town-based business and professional people. Its novelty consists not in its technology or manner of distribution, but in its functions for a distinct class in a changing and more liberal social-political climate.

Later history of the newspaper can be told either as a series of struggles, advances and reverses in the cause of liberty or as a more continuous history of economic and technological progress. The most important phase in press history started after the entrance into the modern definition of the newspaper. Mc Quail has listed the qualifications of a newspaper as follows:

  • Regular and frequent appearance
  • Commodity form
  • Informational content
  • Public sphere functions
  • Urban, secular audience
  • Relative freedom

Genres of newspaper according to Mc Quail:
  • The political press
  • The prestige press
  • The commercial newspaper

Stanley J. Baran and Dennis K. Davis has stated in 'Mass Communication Theory' that in the mid and late nineteenth century, popular demand for cheap media content drove the development of new media such as the penny press. High-speed printing presses and other technological advancement made it practical to mass produce the printed word at very low cost. Urban newspapers boomed all along the East Coast and in major trading centers across the United States. Newspaper circulation wars broke out and led to development of yellow journalism, the irresponsible side of the penny press.

In 1700, Benjamin Harris published the first American newspaper, Publick Occurrences both Foreign and Domestick, which contained material offensive to the ruling power. The paper was suppressed after one issue. Fourteen years would pass before another attempt would surface. In 1704, the Boston News Letter was published by John Campbell.
Competition grew as the number of newspaper goes up.

A Joseph R. Dominick presented in 'The Dynamics of Mass Communication', several conditions had to exist before a mass press could come into existence:

  • A printing press had to be invented that would produce copies quickly and cheaply.
  • Enough people had to know how to read in order to support such a pres.
  • A 'mass audience' had to be present.

The Penny Press, Yellow Journalism and the birth of Mass Newspapers:

Dominick has identified the four changes during the period of Penny Press (1833-1860):
  • The basis of economic support for newspapers.
  • The pattern of newspaper distribution.
  • The definition of what constituted news.
  • The techniques of news collection.

Then Yellow Journalism (1880-1905) brought enthusiasm, energy, and spirit to the practice of journalism, along with aggressive reporting and investigative stories.

New York City in the 1890s, when Joseph Pulitzer, William Randolph Hearst and two dozen dailies fought for the eyes and the pennies of millions of people newly exposed to reading and to print.

Although the newspaper press already had a long history, it was only towards the end of the nineteenth century that newspapers escaped from the constraints of localism, elitism or sectionalism (political or religious) and became a medium 'for the masses', although were still mainly large urban populations. The formal study of the newspaper has its main roots in German universities early in the twentieth century under the heading of Zeitungswissenschaft. (Mc Quail 4)


McQuail, Denis. Mc Quail's Reader in Mass Communicatioin Theory.London: Sage Publications,2004.

0 comments:

Post a Comment