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E-book
Author Censer, Jack Richard

Title On the trail of the D.C. sniper : fear and the media / Jack R. Censer ; with the assistance of William Miller
Published Charlottesville : University of Virginia Press, 2010

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xx, 243 pages) : illustrations, map
Contents The Washington post and the sniper -- Continuous coverage -- The nation and the world -- The journalists' ordeal -- The schools and the sniper
Summary "For a month in the fall of 2002, a series of sniper attacks suddenly dominated the headlines in the nation's capital. Beginning in the Washington suburbs, these crimes eventually stretched over one hundred miles along I-95 to Richmond. More than a thousand law officers would pursue the perpetrators--an enormous number for one case. The number of reporters covering the story, however, was even greater. "On the Trail of the D.C. Sniper" uses the remarkable events of that October to explore the shifting character of journalism as it entered the twenty-first century and to question how this change in the way news is gathered and reported impacted the events it covered. Because of its political significance, Washington, although not a huge population center, is home to an international news corps rivaling that of London or New York. The sniper story thus gained unusually broad media coverage. These events also coincided with the rise of cable network news, meaning that the story would be delivered through a greatly accelerated news cycle. Continuous coverage on television meant a more intense race for scoops; when a major development wasn't available, lesser incidents were sometimes played up in an attempt to maintain the sense of an always unfolding story. Jack Censer looks at the atmosphere of heightened anxiety in which this killing spree occurred--coming only a year after the 9/11 attacks, as well as the unsolved anthrax scare centered in the D.C. area--and asks if the press, by intensifying its focus, also intensified the sense of fear. To bring in another perspective, Censer looks closely at the elementary and secondary schools in the area, comparing their experience of the threat with the press's perception, and presentation, of it. In most cases, school officials chose a course of precaution in which life could carry on, rather than one of hypervigilance and lockdowns. Although it is widely thought that journalists have strong political and commercial biases, Censer reveals that in this case the press was motivated, above all, by the creation of a gripping story to evoke emotion from its audience. One of the most detailed studies yet published of how the press follows a story in the twenty-four-hour news era, this book provides a window on post-9/11 anxiety and the relationship between those fears, public events, and the news media"--Jacket
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Serial murder investigation -- Washington Metropolitan Area
Criminal snipers -- Washington Metropolitan Area
Crime and the press -- Washington Metropolitan Area
TRUE CRIME -- Murder -- Serial Killers.
HISTORY -- United States -- 20th Century.
Crime and the press
Criminal snipers
Serial murder investigation
Washington (D.C.) Metropolitan Area
Form Electronic book
Author Miller, William, 1951-
LC no. 2009035833
ISBN 9780813928999
0813928990
1283574349
9781283574341
9786613886798
6613886793