{"title":"爱默生的新闻记者","authors":"David O. Dowling","doi":"10.1177/1522637916687321","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This monograph examines New-York Tribune editor Horace Greeley’s support of radical intellectual culture throughout his influential journalistic career, from the antebellum era to the Gilded Age. His early interest in alternatives to the unregulated free market led him to charismatic figures like Ralph Waldo Emerson, who questioned the tenets of laissez-faire capitalism and lamented its impact on politics and culture. Emerson’s followers included Associationists, those who sought to place nature at the center of life as an agricultural resource and to return to humanistic values threatened by the Industrial Revolution. In the pages of the Tribune, Greeley leveraged Associationists’ attack on economic inequality to advance his crusade against unemployment and labor exploitation, including Southern slavery. Publicity campaigns on behalf of economic reform appeared during three key phases of his career. In his weekly New-Yorker, Greeley promoted Emerson and his followers including Associationist radicals during the antebellum period. During the Civil War, he provided a platform for the editorials of Karl Marx. During the Gilded Age, Greeley’s final attempt to realize his socialist utopian vision was the Union Colony, an ill-fated collectivist frontier establishment led by his Tribune agricultural editor Nathan Meeker. Greeley’s relationship with Emerson inspired his willingness to use the Tribune to publicize each era’s most controversial critics of capitalism. 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引用次数: 25
摘要
这本专著考察了《纽约论坛报》(new york Tribune)编辑贺拉斯·格里利(Horace Greeley)在其颇具影响力的记者生涯中,从南北战争前的时代到镀金时代,对激进知识分子文化的支持。他早期对替代不受监管的自由市场的兴趣,使他认识了拉尔夫·沃尔多·爱默生(Ralph Waldo Emerson)等有魅力的人物,爱默生质疑自由放任资本主义的原则,并哀叹其对政治和文化的影响。爱默生的追随者包括联合主义者,这些人试图将自然作为农业资源置于生活的中心,并回归到受到工业革命威胁的人文价值。在《论坛报》的版面上,格里利利用协会主义者对经济不平等的攻击来推进他对失业和劳动剥削的讨伐,包括南方奴隶制。代表经济改革的宣传活动出现在他职业生涯的三个关键阶段。在他的《纽约客》周刊中,格里利在南北战争前宣传爱默生和他的追随者,包括协会主义激进分子。在内战期间,他为卡尔·马克思的社论提供了一个平台。在镀金时代,格里利最后一次尝试实现他的社会主义乌托邦愿景是联合殖民地,这是一个命运多端的集体主义边境机构,由他的《论坛报》农业编辑内森·米克尔领导。格里利与爱默生的关系促使他愿意利用《论坛报》来宣传每个时代最具争议的资本主义批评者。这项研究追溯了新闻界历史和宣传机构中社会主义的线索,这些宣传机构将激进的知识分子文化带入了美国生活的突出地位。
This monograph examines New-York Tribune editor Horace Greeley’s support of radical intellectual culture throughout his influential journalistic career, from the antebellum era to the Gilded Age. His early interest in alternatives to the unregulated free market led him to charismatic figures like Ralph Waldo Emerson, who questioned the tenets of laissez-faire capitalism and lamented its impact on politics and culture. Emerson’s followers included Associationists, those who sought to place nature at the center of life as an agricultural resource and to return to humanistic values threatened by the Industrial Revolution. In the pages of the Tribune, Greeley leveraged Associationists’ attack on economic inequality to advance his crusade against unemployment and labor exploitation, including Southern slavery. Publicity campaigns on behalf of economic reform appeared during three key phases of his career. In his weekly New-Yorker, Greeley promoted Emerson and his followers including Associationist radicals during the antebellum period. During the Civil War, he provided a platform for the editorials of Karl Marx. During the Gilded Age, Greeley’s final attempt to realize his socialist utopian vision was the Union Colony, an ill-fated collectivist frontier establishment led by his Tribune agricultural editor Nathan Meeker. Greeley’s relationship with Emerson inspired his willingness to use the Tribune to publicize each era’s most controversial critics of capitalism. This research traces the socialist threads in the tapestry of press history and the promotional apparatus that brought radical intellectual culture into prominence in American life.