Einträge zu dem Titel "Medienmacht und Politik : Die politischen Ambitionen großer Zeitungsunternehmer - Hearst, Northcliffe, Beaverbrook und Hugenberg im Vergleich / Requate, Jörg (2001)":

[Allegro-Code Code Beschreibung] Inhalt
[00 Identifikationsnummer[+BandNr[+TeilNr[+...]]][=Bandbezeichnung]] 00316113
[15w ] cd00338690
[20 Hauptsachtitel. Körperschaftliche Ergänzung : Zusatz] Medienmacht und Politik : Die politischen Ambitionen großer Zeitungsunternehmer - Hearst, Northcliffe, Beaverbrook und Hugenberg im Vergleich
[31 Schlagwörter, Thesaurusbegriffe] Unternehmer > Geschäftsmann; Verleger; Wirtschaftsbürgertum; Industrielle; Fabrikanten
Presse > Zeitungen > Publizistik; Öffentliche Meinung
[31g diverse Spezialschlagwörter] Großbritannien; 00360209
[31p diverse Spezialschlagwörter] (DE-588)118554565
[37 Sprache(n) des Textes] Deutsch
[40 Hauptverfasser] Requate, Jörg (JDG | GND)
[48 ] Requate, Jörg: Medienmacht und Politik
[70 Quelle (Zeitschriftentitel[ ; Band(Jahrgang)Heft, Seiten])] z00043
[704 Detaillierte Quellenangaben Band] 41
[708 Detaillierte Quellenangaben Seiten] 79-95
[76 Erscheinungsjahr] 2001
[90 [Standort]Signatur[ = Magazinsignatur]] L 15.03
[90a ] N 14.03
[92a ] G
[92b ] I
[92c ] 15
[94 Verknüpfung zu externen Ressourcen] 2001
[94f ] rff
[94o ] 1a
[96 frei verwendbar (z.B. bibliotheksspezifische Daten)] ZA
[98 Abstract] The relation between economic power and a political influence difficult to define lay at the foundations of the aura - in part fascinating, in part threatening - which surounded the press barons of the first half of the 20th century. This essay does not seek to provide the reasons for the infjuence of the major press companies in general; instead it focusus on the question of wich politica1 ambitions the bosses of the major newspaper corporations held for themselves and the extent to which they were successful in fulfilling those ambitions.The comparative method allows a view of <>absolute<< factor of power and more as one embedded in respective national political constellations and national press traditions and which could therefore vary in effectiveness. One central argument is thus that for those press entrepreneurs who held political ambitions - such as William Randolph Hearst, the British Lords Northcliffe, Rothermere or Beaverbrook as well as Alfred Hugenberg - there were considerable structural problems for transforming their journalistic influence into direct political power. For Hearst or Northcliffe, whose influence, not to mention their papers' economic success, was based on their claim to being politically independent, their striving for political office placed this success at risk and, in turn, threatened the basis of their potential political influence. Alfred Hugenberg too, who had established his newspaper empire specifically for party political purposes, failed in the end to transform his journalistic influence into political power. This in no way minimises the >>real<< influence but indicates that such a belief needs to be maintained. On the other hand, the examples used show that it was obviously easier to apply journalistic influence against existing governments that to use that influence - at least as long as freedom of the press ruled - to exploit it a basis of political execution of power.
[99e Änderungsdatum] 20150826/08:45:59-34008/10 obar
[99n Zugangsdatum (Erfassungsdatum)] 20011123/09:29:33
[99w ] 20050803
[M0m ] Ehemals Datei 101