Burying the Lead The Media and the JFK Assassination

Description

An updated review of the case's facts and novel analysis of the way elite power works with the media during times of crisis

The Cold War ushered in a time of secrecy—and willing media cooperation to keep those secrets. But even after winning that war, the vault of secrets remains firmly locked, especially surrounding John F. Kennedy's murder. Even for those who fundamentally oppose the current presidential administration, notions of a national security state and "fake news" must be examined to maintain a functional democracy. This book explains the rapid decline in confidence in government that started after the assassination of JFK. The mainstream media failed to go beyond repeating the official story, and by 1991 they, along with academe and the government, had stopped investigating altogether.
It was filmmaker Oliver Stone whose film fueled public outrage and led to the JFK Act to declassify all of the remaining documents. Almost four million pages of documents were then released—that even Congress had not yet seen. The JFK Act stated that all files must be released by October 2017, yet thousands are still withheld on the grounds of national security. This volume examines the tight alliances that have allowed this cover-up for more than 50 years.
President Kennedy declared in October 1963 that "men who create power make an indispensable contribution to a nation's greatness, but the men who question power make a contribution just as indispensable, especially when they are disinterested, for they determine whether we use power or power uses us."

SOCIAL SCIENCE
576 PAGES, 6 X 9
FORMATS: TRADE PAPER
TRADE PAPER, $24.95 (US $24.95) (CA $33.95)
PUBLICATION DATE: FEBRUARY 2019
ISBN 9781634241878
RIGHTS: WOR
TRINE DAY (FEB 2019)

Product form

An updated review of the case's facts and novel analysis of the way elite power works with the media during... Read more

SKU: 9781634241878
Barcode: 9781634241878

$24.95 Excl. VAT

Description

An updated review of the case's facts and novel analysis of the way elite power works with the media during times of crisis

The Cold War ushered in a time of secrecy—and willing media cooperation to keep those secrets. But even after winning that war, the vault of secrets remains firmly locked, especially surrounding John F. Kennedy's murder. Even for those who fundamentally oppose the current presidential administration, notions of a national security state and "fake news" must be examined to maintain a functional democracy. This book explains the rapid decline in confidence in government that started after the assassination of JFK. The mainstream media failed to go beyond repeating the official story, and by 1991 they, along with academe and the government, had stopped investigating altogether.
It was filmmaker Oliver Stone whose film fueled public outrage and led to the JFK Act to declassify all of the remaining documents. Almost four million pages of documents were then released—that even Congress had not yet seen. The JFK Act stated that all files must be released by October 2017, yet thousands are still withheld on the grounds of national security. This volume examines the tight alliances that have allowed this cover-up for more than 50 years.
President Kennedy declared in October 1963 that "men who create power make an indispensable contribution to a nation's greatness, but the men who question power make a contribution just as indispensable, especially when they are disinterested, for they determine whether we use power or power uses us."

SOCIAL SCIENCE
576 PAGES, 6 X 9
FORMATS: TRADE PAPER
TRADE PAPER, $24.95 (US $24.95) (CA $33.95)
PUBLICATION DATE: FEBRUARY 2019
ISBN 9781634241878
RIGHTS: WOR
TRINE DAY (FEB 2019)

Reviews

Burying the Lead  The Media and the JFK Assassination

Burying the Lead The Media and the JFK Assassination

0 out of 5 stars

This product has no reviews yet

Recently viewed products

Login

Forgot your password?

Don't have an account yet?
Create account