Breaking the News: Telegraphy and Yellow Journalism In the Spanish-American War
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2016
Department
English
School
Humanities
Abstract
This essay reengages the familiar topic of yellow journalism through the historical and formal discontinuities introduced by electrical telegraphy during the Spanish-American War. It places popular newspapers such as William Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal and Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World in the context of signal-processing technologies such as telegraphy and the wire-based press, which allowed for the manipulation of alphanumeric data through electrical signals. By breaking down the continuities of communication into discrete series and signals, telegraphy created the conditions necessary to coordinate action at a distance through the manipulation of serial data: the signs, signals, and other discrete bits of intelligence that were actively reconstructed by newspapers to produce the continuous spectacle of war news and sensational journalism.
Publication Title
American Periodicals
Volume
26
Issue
2
First Page
130
Last Page
148
Recommended Citation
Carey, C.
(2016). Breaking the News: Telegraphy and Yellow Journalism In the Spanish-American War. American Periodicals, 26(2), 130-148.
Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/19731