http://www.salon.com/2014/03/29/ ANDREW PETTEGREE
rumor_gossip_nonsense_how_the_news_became_a_nightmare MAR 29,
2014
Rumor, gossip, nonsense: How the news became a
nightmare The road to Fox News and
the commercialization of information begins with the amazing history of mass
media
Excerpted from "The Invention
of News: How the World Came to Know About Itself"
In 1704 the English writer Daniel Defoe embarked on
the publication of a political journal: the Weekly Review of the Affairs
of France. This was not yet the Defoe made famous by his great novel
Robinson Crusoe; he would discover his vocation as a novelist only late in
life. Up to this point Defoe had tried his hand at many things, and often
failed. The Review (as it soon became) was the latest of many attempts to
find a way to make money. This time it worked. Within a few months DefoeÕs
publication had found its new form, as a serial issued two or three times
a week, consisting largely of a single essay on an item of topical interest.
Defoe was lucky. He had launched the Review at a
time when the reading public was expanding rapidly, along with a market
for current affairs. Naturally Defoe made the most of it. When, in an
essay in 1712, he turned his mind to this buoyant market for news
publishing, he did not hold back. The present times, wrote Defoe, had seen
a media explosion. He recalled a time, even in his own lifetime, when
there had been no such torrent of newspapers, state papers and political
writing. The rage for news was transforming society, and Defoe was happy
to be in the thick of it.
Defoe was not the only one to remark the current
passion for news, and the rancorous tone of political debate that seemed
to come with it. But if he truly thought this was new he was very much
mistaken. The conflicts of the English Civil War over sixty years
previously had stimulated a torrent of pamphlets, news reports and abusive
political treatises. The first continental newspapers were established
forty years before that. Long before Defoe, and even before the creation
of the newspapers, the appetite for news was proverbial. ÔHow now, what
news?Õ was a common English greeting, frequently evoked on the London
stage. Travelers could buy phrase books that offered the
necessary vocabulary, so they too could join the conversation: ÔWhat news
have you? How goeth all in this city? What news have they in Spain?Õ
If there was a time when news first became a
commercial commodity, it occurred not in DefoeÕs London, or even with the
invention of the newspaper, but much earlier: in the eighty years between
1450 and 1530 following the invention of printing. During this period of
technological innovation, publishers began to experiment with new types of
books, far shorter and cheaper than the theological and scholarly texts
that had dominated the market in manuscripts. These pamphlets and broadsheets
created the opportunity to turn the existing appetite for news into a mass
market. News could become, for the first time, a part of popular
culture.
This book, which traces the development of the
European news market in the four centuries between about 1400 and 1800, is
the story of that transformation. It follows the development of a
commercial news market from the medieval period – when news was the
prerogative of political elites – to a point four hundred years
later when news was beginning to play a decisive role in popular politics.
By the time of the French and American revolutions at the end of the
eighteenth century, news publications were not only providing a day by day
account of unfolding events, they could be seen to play an influential
role in shaping them. The age of a mass media lay at hand.
Trusting the Messenger: Of course the desire to be informed, to be in the
know, is in one respect as old as human society itself. People would go to
some lengths to find out the news. In the eleventh century two monasteries
in rural Wales, one hundred miles apart across rugged terrain, would every
third year exchange messengers who would live in the other house for a
week, to share the news. This
tale, related in a Tudor chronicle, points up one other important aspect
of the information culture of that earlier period. Our medieval
ancestors had a profound suspicion of information that came to them in
written form. They were by no means certain that something written was
more trustworthy than the spoken word. Rather the contrary: a news report
gained credibility from the reputation of the person who delivered it. So
a news report delivered verbally by a trusted friend or messenger was far
more likely to be believed than an anonymous written report. This old tradition,
where the trust given to a report depended on the credit of the teller,
had an enduring influence over attitudes to news reporting. But this early
news world is not easy to reconstruct. Verbal reports in the nature of
things leave little trace for the historian: studying the early history of
news is a matter of combing through scraps and fragments.
Bernard of Clairvaux, architect of the Cistercian
order, sat at the centre of one of medieval EuropeÕs greatest news
networks. Those who visited Clairvaux in eastern France would bring him
news of their travels; sometimes they would carry his letters away with
them when they departed. We are unusually well informed about BernardÕs
news network, because over five hundred of his letters survive. But in
some respects Bernard is utterly characteristic of the news world of the
medieval period. At this time regular access to news was the prerogative
of those in circles of power. Only they could afford it; only they had the
means to gather it. But even for these privileged individuals at the apex
of society, news gathering was not unproblematic. They were fully
aware that those who brought them news were likely to be interested
parties. The traveling cleric who brought Bernard news of a distant episcopal
election might be supporting one candidate; the ambassador writing home
from abroad might be seeking to influence policy; merchants hoped to gain
from a fluctuating market. Merchants, in particular, had a keen awareness
of the value of information, and the dangers of acting on a false rumor.
For the first two centuries of the period covered by this book merchants
were both the principal consumers of news and its most reliable
suppliers. Even as news became
more plentiful in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the problem of
establishing the veracity of news reports remained acute. The news market
– and by the sixteenth century it was a real market –
was humming with conflicting reports, some incredible, some all too
plausible: lives, fortunes, even the fate of kingdoms could depend on
acting on the right information. The great events of history that pepper
these pages were often initially mis-reported.
In 1588 it was originally thought throughout much
of continental Europe that the Spanish Armada had inflicted a crushing
defeat on the English fleet; as in this case, the first definitive news
was frequently outrun by rumor or wishful thinking, spreading panic or
misjudged celebration. It was important to be first with the news, but
only if it was true. This troubling paradox initiated a second phase in
the history of news analysis: the search for corroboration. As we will
see, by the sixteenth century professional news men had become quite
sophisticated in their handling of sensitive information. The first intimation
of tumultuous events was reported, but with the cautious reflection Ôthis
report is not yet confirmedÕ. EuropeÕs rulers would pay richly for the
earliest report of a crucial event, but they often waited for the second
or third report before acting upon it. But this was not a luxury all could
afford: for the French Protestants hearing news of the St BartholomewÕs
Day Massacre in August 1572, only immediate action might save them from
becoming one of the next victims. In these troubled times news could be a
matter of life and death.
News, Rumor and Gossip: Not all news concerned events of such momentous or
immediate relevance. Even before the publication of the first weekly
newspapers in the seventeenth century, enormous quantities of news were
available for those prepared to pay for it, or even just to follow the
talk in the market square. To Defoe this abundance was a great miracle of
modern society. To others it was deeply troubling. From this great mass of
swirling information how could one extract what was truly significant? How
could one tell the signal from the noise? Those who followed the news had to devise their
own methods of making their way through the mass of rumor, exaggeration
and breathlessly shared confidences to construct a reasonable version of
the truth. First they tended to exclude the purely personal and parochial.
Our ancestors certainly delighted in the tales of the ambitions, schemes
and misfortunes of their families, neighbors and friends: who was to marry
whom, which merchants and tradesmen faced ruin, whose reputation had been
compromised by a liaison with a servant or apprentice. When in 1561 a
citizen of Memmlingen in southern Germany rather unwisely decided to get
to the bottom of who had spread a rumor that his daughter had fled town to
conceal an unwanted pregnancy, fifty citizens could offer precise
recollections of how they first heard this delicious gossip. But however
eagerly consumed and passed on, this sort of scuttlebutt was not generally
what people thought of as news. When men and women asked friends, business
partners or neighbors, ÔWhat news?Õ, they meant news of great events: of
developments at court, wars, battles, pestilence or the fall of the great.
This was the news that they shared in correspondence and conversation, and
this was the news that fuelled the first commercial market in current
affairs.
Very occasionally, through a diary or family
chronicle, we have a window into the process by which early news readers
weighed and evaluated these news reports. One such was Herman Weinsberg,
who lived in the great German city of Cologne in the later sixteenth
century. Weinsberg, it must be said, was a very odd man. It was only after
his death that his appalled family discovered that he had memorialized all
their doings in an expansive chronicle of their lives and times.
Weinsberg, who lived a comfortable existence on the rents from inherited
property, took a close interest in contemporary events. Living outside the
circles of the city elite, he was forced to rely on what he picked up from
friends, or read in purchased pamphlets. Happily a news hub like Cologne
was drenched in information, but not all sources could be relied upon.
WeinsbergÕs technique was to weigh conflicting reports to discern the Ôgeneral
opinionÕ or consensus. In this he unconsciously imitated precisely
the process followed by the cityÕs magistrates, or at EuropeÕs princely
courts. But sometimes it was simply impossible to discern the true state
of affairs.
When in 1585 the nearby town of Neuss was
surprisingly captured by forces of the Protestant Archbishop Gerhard von
Truchsess, Weinsberg heard no fewer than twelve different accounts of how
the archbishopÕs soldiers had slipped into the town undetected. He
interviewed eyewitnesses who told their own story. The city council sent
messenger after messenger to find out what had happened, but they were
prevented from entering the town. Weinsberg had eventually to conclude
that the true facts might never be known: ÔEach person cannot truly say
and know more than what he had seen and heard at the place where he was at
that hour. But if he heard about it from others, the story may be faulty;
he cannot truly know it.Õ [Keyterm- ÒRashomon EffectÓ]
The exponential growth of news reporting did not
necessarily make things easier; many believed it made things worse. In
fact, for those traditionally in the know, the industrialization of news,
the creation of a news industry where news was traded for profit,
threatened to undermine the whole process by which news had traditionally
been verified – where the credit of the report was closely linked to
the reputation of the teller. In the burgeoning mass market this vital
link – the personal integrity of those who passed on the news –
was broken.
The Commercialization of News: In the first stages of our narrative
almost no one made money from supplying news. On the contrary, the
provision of news was so expensive that only the elites of medieval Europe
could afford it. You either had to pay large sums to build up a network of
messengers – a fixed cost that proved beyond the means even of some
of EuropeÕs wealthiest rulers – or rely on those under a
social obligation to provide news for free: feudal dependants, aspirants
for favor, or, in the case of the Church, fellow clerics. Even EuropeÕs
most mighty princes frequently cut costs by handing their despatches to
friendly merchants, who would carry them for free.
It is only in the sixteenth century that we will
encounter the systematic commercialization of these services. The first to
make money from selling news were a group of discreet and worldly men who
plied their trade in the cities of Italy. Here in EuropeÕs most
sophisticated news market they offered their clients, themselves powerful
men, a weekly handwritten briefing. The most successful ran a shop full of
scribes turning out several dozen copies a week. These avvisi were
succinct, wide ranging and remarkably well informed. They are one of the
great untold stories of the early news market.
This was an expensive service, yet such was the
thirst for information that many of EuropeÕs rulers and their advisers
subscribed to several of them. But such facilities only met the needs of
those for whom access to the best sources of information was a political
necessity. The vast majority of the population made do with what news they
could come by for free: in the tavern or marketplace, in official
announcements proclaimed on the town hall steps. These too played an
important role in shaping the climate of opinion, and would remain an
essential part of the news market throughout the period covered in
this book. EuropeÕs more humble residents sought out news where they could
find it: in conversation, correspondence, from travelers and friends.
The real transformation of the news market would
come from the development of a news market in print. This would occur only
haltingly after the first invention of printing in the
mid-fifteenth century. For half a century or more thereafter printers
would follow a very conservative strategy, concentrating on publishing
editions of the books most familiar from the medieval
manuscript tradition. But in the sixteenth century they would also begin
to open up new markets – and one of these was a market for news.
News fitted ideally into the expanding market for cheap print, and it
swiftly became an important commodity. This burgeoning wave of news
reporting was of an entirely different order. It took its tone from the
new genre of pamphlets that had preceded it: the passionate advocacy that
had accompanied the Reformation. So this sort of news reporting was very
different from the discreet, dispassionate services of the manuscript news
men. News pamphlets were often committed and engaged, intended to persuade
as well as inform. News also became, for the first time, part of the
entertainment industry. What could be more entertaining than the tale of
some catastrophe in a far-off place, or a grisly murder?
This was not unproblematic, particularly for the
traditional leaders of society who were used to news being part of a
confidential service, provided by trusted agents. Naturally the elites
sought to control this new commercial market, to ensure that the messages
delivered by these news books would show them in a good light. Printers
who wanted their shops to remain open were careful to report only the
local princeÕs victories and triumphs, not the battlefield reverses that
undermined his reputation and authority. Those printers
who co-operated willingly could rely on help in securing access to
the right texts. Court poets and writers, often quite distinguished
literary figures, found that they were obliged to undertake new and
unfamiliar tasks, penning texts lauding their princeÕs military prowess
and excoriating his enemies. Many of these writings made their way into
print. For all that this period is often presented as one of autocratic
and unrepresentative government, we will discover that from remarkably
early in the age of the first printed books EuropeÕs rulers invested
considerable effort in putting their point of view, and explaining their
policies, to their citizens. This too is an important part of the story of
news.
The patriotic optimism of the news pamphlets served
EuropeÕs rulers well in their first precocious efforts at the management of
public opinion. But it posed difficulties for those whose decisions relied
on an accurate flow of information. Merchants ready to consign their goods
to the road had to have a more measured view of what they would find
– news pamphlets that obscured the true state of affairs were no
good to them if what was important was that their cargoes should safely
reach their destination. The divisions within Europe brought about by the
Reformation were a further complicating factor: the news vendors of
Protestant and Catholic nations would increasingly reproduce only news
that came from their side of the confessional divide. News therefore took
on an increasingly sectarian character. All this led to distortions
tending to obscure the true course of events. This might be good for
morale, but for those in positions of influence who needed to have access
to more dispassionate reporting the growth of this mass market in news
print was largely a distraction. For this reason the rash of news
pamphlets that flooded the market in the sixteenth century did not drive
out the more exclusive manuscript services. The avvisi continued to find a
market among those with the money to pay; in many parts of Europe
confidential manuscript news services continued to prosper well into the second half
of the eighteenth century.
The Birth of the Newspaper: The printed news pamphlets of the
sixteenth century were a milestone in the development of the news market,
but they further complicated issues of truth and veracity. Competing for
limited disposable cash among a less wealthy class of reader, the
purveyors of the news pamphlets had a clear incentive to make these
accounts as lively as possible. This raised real questions as to
their reliability. How could a news report possibly be trusted if the
author exaggerated to increase its commercial appeal?
The emergence of the newspaper in the early
seventeenth century represents an attempt to square this circle. As the
apparatus of government grew in EuropeÕs new nation states, the number of
those who needed to keep abreast of the news also increased exponentially.
In 1605 one enterprising German stationer thought he could meet this
demand by mechanizing his existing manuscript newsletter service. This was
the birth of the newspaper: but its style – the sober, detached
recitation of news reports inherited from the manuscript newsletter
– had little in common with that of the more engaged and discursive
news pamphlets.
The newspaper, as it turned out, would have a
difficult birth. Although it spread quickly, with newspapers founded in
over twenty German towns in the next thirty years, other parts of Europe
proved more resistant – Italy for instance was late to adopt this
form of news publication. Many of the first newspapers struggled to make
money, and swiftly closed.
The trouble with the newspapers was that they were not very
enjoyable. Although it might be important to be seen to be a subscriber,
and thus to have the social kudos of one who followed the worldÕs affairs,
the early newspapers were not much fun to read. The desiccated sequence of
bare, undecorated facts made them difficult to follow – sometimes,
plainly baffling. What did it mean to be told that the Duke of Sessa had
arrived in Florence, without knowing who he was or why he was there? Was
this a good thing or a bad thing? For inexperienced news readers this was
tough going. People who were used to the familiar ordered narrative of a
news pamphlet found the style alienating.
News pamphlets offered a very different
presentation of news, and one far better adapted to contemporary narrative
conventions. Pamphlets concentrated on the most exciting events, battles,
crimes and sensations; and they were generally published at the close of
the events they described. They had a beginning, a middle and an end. Most
of all, news pamphlets attempted an explanation of causes and
consequences. By and large, this being a religious age, news pamphlets of
this sort also drew a moral: that the king was mighty; that malefactors
got their just deserts; that the unfortunate victims of
natural catastrophe were being punished for their sins.
The news reporting of the newspapers was very
different, and utterly unfamiliar to those who had not previously been
subscribers to the manuscript service. Each report was no more than a
couple of sentences long. It offered no explanation, comment or
commentary. Unlike a news pamphlet the reader did not know where this
fitted in the narrative – or even whether what was reported would
turn out to be important. This made for a very particular and quite
demanding sort of news. The format offered inexperienced readers
very little help. The most important story was seldom placed first; there
were no headlines, and no illustrations. And because newspapers were
offered on a subscription basis, readers were expected to follow events
from issue to issue; this was time-consuming, expensive and rather
wearing.
This was not at all how most citizens of European
society in these years experienced news. For them, great events might only
be of interest when they impacted their lives directly. Even for the more
curious, it was easy to dip in and out, to buy a pamphlet when it
interested them, and, when not, to save the money for some other pursuit.
This made far more sense in terms of the way events unfolded –
sometimes momentous, sometimes frankly rather humdrum. The news pamphlets
reflected this reality: that sometimes news was important, and provoked a
flurry of activity on the presses, and sometimes it was not.
So it was by no means easy to persuade the
inhabitants of seventeenth-century Europe that the purchase of news
publications should be a regular commitment. It is not difficult to see
why newspapers were so slow to catch on. Consumers had to be taught to
want a regular fix of news, and they had to acquire the tools to
understand it. This took time; the circle of those with an understanding
of the world outside their own town or village expanded only slowly. For
all of these reasons it would be well over a hundred years from
the foundation of the first newspaper before it became an everyday part of
life – and only at the end of the eighteenth century would the
newspaper become a major agent of opinion-forming.
The birth of the newspaper did not immediately
transform the news market. Indeed, for at least a hundred years newspapers
struggled to find a place in what remained a multi-media business.
The dawn of print did not suppress earlier forms of news transmission.
Most people continued to receive much of their news by word of mouth. The
transmission of news offered a profound demonstration of the vitality of
these raucous, intimate, neighborly societies. News was passed from person
to person in the market square, in and outside church, in family groups.
Enterprising citizens celebrated exciting occurrences in song: this too
became a major conduit of news, and one quite lucrative to traveling
singers who otherwise would have struggled to make a living. Singing was also
potentially very subversive – magistrates found it much more
difficult to identify the composer of a seditious song than to close a
print-shop. The more sophisticated and knowing could
enjoy contemporary references at the theatre. Playgoing, with its
repertoire of in-jokes and topical references, was an important arena
of news in the larger cities. All these different locations played their
part in a multi-media news world that coexisted with the new world of
print.
These long-established habits of information
exchange set a demanding standard for the new print media. We need to keep
constantly in mind that in these centuries the communication of public
business took place almost exclusively in communal settings. Citizens
gathered to witness civic events, such as the arrival of notable visitors
or the execution of notorious criminals. They heard official orders
proclaimed by municipal or royal officials; they gathered around the
church door to read ordinances or libels; they swopped rumors and sung
topical songs. It is significant that in this age to ÔpublishÕ meant to
voice abroad, verbally: books were merely ÔprintedÕ. Printed news had both
to encourage new habits of consumption – the private reading
that had previously been an elite preserve – and to adopt the
cadences and stylistic forms of these older oral traditions. Reading early
news pamphlets, we can often hear the music of the streets, with all their
hubbub and exuberant variety. Readers of early newspapers, in contrast,
were offered the cloistered hush of the chancery. They were not to
everybodyÕs taste.
News Men: The complexities of this trade called for agility on
the part of those who hoped to make money from news. Many who tried were
disappointed. Pamphlet publishing was highly competitive, and only those
whose connections gave them access to reliable sources of information
could expect to flourish. Many of the first newspapers were remarkably
short-lived. Those that survived often did so with a discrete subsidy
from the local prince – hardly a guarantee of editorial
independence. For much of DefoeÕs time writing the Review he was paid a
secret retainer by one or other of EnglandÕs leading politicians
to promote their policies. Sir Robert Walpole coped with a critical press
by buying the newspapers and making them his mouthpiece. Walpole went on
to become EnglandÕs longest-serving eighteenth-century prime
minister.
For most of this period there was not much money to
be made from publishing news, and most of it went to those at the top of
the trade. If some did grow rich, they were the proprietors: in the
sixteenth century the publishers of the bespoke manuscript services, later
the publishers of newspapers. A manuscript news-service was by and
large the business of a single well-informed individual. As his reputation
grew he might have found it necessary to employ an increasing number of
scribes to make up the handwritten copies; but his was the sole editorial
voice.
The first newspapers were put together in much the
same way. The publisher was exclusively responsible for their content. His
task was essentially editorial: gathering reports; bundling them up;
passing them on. In many cases the publisher was the only person
professionally involved in this stage of the production process. He
employed no staff and no journalists in the modern sense. Much of the
information that made up the copy of the first newspapers was provided
free: information passing through the rapidly expanding European postal
service or sent by correspondence. Some of the newspapers were quasi-official publications
with close connections to local court officials, who provided access to
reliable information from state papers. Publishers found other ways to
augment the meagre pickings from cover-price sales and subscriptions. For
many, advertising became the mainstay of the business model; for others,
obliging politicians with their gifts, pensions or promises of office
paved the way to a better life.
The nature of the newspapers and the means of their
compilation left little scope for what we might regard as journalism. The
reports were not long enough to leave room for much in the way of comment
or commentary. As the newspapers became more established in the eighteenth
century some publishers employed a few stringers, men who would hang
around the law courts or stock exchange hoping to pick up snippets of
publishable material. But such men seldom leave much of a mark in the
records. Although we will meet some colorful characters in these pages,
this was not yet the age of the professional journalist. The information
they provided was hardly ever valuable enough to command the exclusive
service of one particular paper. Most sold their stories to whomever would
have them. It is only with the great events at the end of the eighteenth century
– the struggle for press freedom in England and the French and
American revolutions – that newspapers found a strong editorial
voice, and at that point a career in journalism became a real possibility.
But it was always hazardous. As many of the celebrity politician writers
of the French Revolution found, a career could be cut short
(quite literally) by a turn in political fortunes. At least these men
lived and died in a blaze of publicity. For others, the drones of the
trade, snuffling up rumor for scraps, penury was a more mundane danger.
The Sinews of Power: The more sophisticated news market that emerged during
this period depended on the construction of a network of communications.
Between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries this too was steadily
improved. The European postal networks became more intricate and more
reliable. News reports became more frequent. It became easier to verify
what one had heard from a second or third independent source. That this
was possible was largely the result of the creation of far more efficient
means of exchanging written communication over long distances. At the
beginning of the fourteenth century only the rich and powerful could
afford the cost of maintaining a network of couriers; as a result, those
in positions of power largely determined what information should be shared
with other citizens. By the eighteenth century relatively ordinary
citizens could travel, send and receive mail, or purchase news reports.
The process of information exchange had been put on a rational commercial
basis. Millions of communications now flowed along the arterial routes of
European trade every year. News was abundant: now everyone could have an
opinion, and many chose to express it.
In many respects the four prime considerations that
governed the business of news – its speed, reliability, the control
of content and entertainment value – were remarkably unchanging in
these centuries. At different times one or other of these priorities would
matter more to consumers of news than others; sometimes they would be in
direct conflict. The truth was seldom as entertaining as tall stories;
news men were often tempted to pass off the one as the other. But whatever
the place and whatever the news medium, these four principles, speed, reliability,
control and entertainment, express fairly succinctly the main concerns of
those who gathered, sold and consumed the news.
The centuries with which this book, ÒThe Invention of
News: How the World Came to Know About ItselfÓ by Andrew Pettegree,
is concerned witnessed a vast widening of horizons for EuropeÕs citizens.
The discovery of the Americas and the creation of new trade routes to Asia
brought a fresh relationship with distant continents. But while these new
discoveries have done much to shape our perceptions of those periods, just
as important at the time was the quiet incremental revolution that brought
citizens in touch with the neighboring city, the capital and other
countries in Europe. Sitting down to their weekly digest of news in any of
a dozen European countries in 1750, men and women could experience the
fascination of faraway events. They could obtain, through regular perusal,
a sense of the leading personalities of European society, and the
disposition of its powers. Four centuries previously such knowledge
would have been far less widely shared. In this earlier period for the
vast majority of citizens news of life outside the village, or the city
walls, depended on chance encounters with strangers. Many such citizens
would have little knowledge of the world beyond, unless directly affected
by the local consequences of high politics or warfare. This was a very
different time for news. What we do detect, however, even at this earlier
date, is a hunger for information, even if it could only be satisfied for
those in the highest reaches of politics and commerce. This was the same
hunger that in the centuries that followed would set European society on
the road towards a modern culture of communication. ...Excerpted from ÒThe Invention of
News: How the World Came to Know About ItselfÓ by Andrew Pettegree.
Published by Yale University Press. Copyright 2014 by Andrew Pettegree.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.