"It is grievous to read the papers in most respects, I agree. More and more I skim the headlines only, for one can be sure what is carried beneath them quite automatically, if one has long been a reader of the press journalism"
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There is a special kind of exhaustion in Beard's voice: not the lazy "media fatigue" of someone bored, but the practiced despair of a historian watching institutions calcify in real time. Her complaint isn't merely that newspapers are depressing; it's that they have become predictable. The sting sits in that phrase "quite automatically". Beard is diagnosing a machine. Once you've "long been a reader", you no longer need the article because you know the script: which facts will be foregrounded, which people will be reduced to types, which interests will be treated as common sense.
The intent is quietly radical. Beard, who spent her career arguing that history had been edited to exclude women's lives, is pointing at the editorial process as a kind of cultural gatekeeping that operates invisibly - a production line of narratives that train the public to accept a narrow version of reality. Skimming headlines becomes both self-defense and an indictment: if the press has become so formulaic that readers can infer the contents, then journalism has failed at its supposed job of discovery.
Context matters here. Beard lived through the Progressive Era, two world wars, the rise of mass-circulation papers, and the professionalization of "objective" journalism - a style that often masked bias behind tone and selection. Her subtext is that readers are not just consuming news; they're being conditioned. When she says it's "grievous", she's mourning not only what the papers report, but what they make thinkable.
The intent is quietly radical. Beard, who spent her career arguing that history had been edited to exclude women's lives, is pointing at the editorial process as a kind of cultural gatekeeping that operates invisibly - a production line of narratives that train the public to accept a narrow version of reality. Skimming headlines becomes both self-defense and an indictment: if the press has become so formulaic that readers can infer the contents, then journalism has failed at its supposed job of discovery.
Context matters here. Beard lived through the Progressive Era, two world wars, the rise of mass-circulation papers, and the professionalization of "objective" journalism - a style that often masked bias behind tone and selection. Her subtext is that readers are not just consuming news; they're being conditioned. When she says it's "grievous", she's mourning not only what the papers report, but what they make thinkable.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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