000 01440nam a22001457a 4500
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100 _aMajumdar, Aritra
_943039
245 _aReading press freedom through constitutional and legal history
260 _aEconomic and Political Weekly
300 _a58(43), Oct 28, 2023: p.25-26
520 _aHistorians of the press face a central question—do they focus on the influence of business interests on the press reportage, or should the relations of the state with the Fourth Estate take precedence? Between the histories of censorship (Barrier 1974) on the one hand and favourable biographies of the press barons on the other (Verghese 2005), the interaction of various interests and the ever-extended arm of the state becomes blurred. Hence, when an ex-journalist and current teacher of history attempts to write the history of the press in independent India, he steps into an already crowded field (the latest being Devika Sethi’s work on censorship in 2019). He tasks himself with re-examining the decades since India’s independence with a Habermasian lens on the influences that may colonise the press and through it, the lifeworld of rational discourse (Habermas 1984).- Reproduced https://www.epw.in/journal/2023/43/book-reviews/reading-press-freedom-through-constitutional-and.html
773 _aEconomic and Political Weekly
906 _aBOOK REVIEW
942 _cAR