| Neil
Berry, Articles of Faith
Second edition,
updated and enlarged 272
pp, ISBN 978-1-904130-32-1, £8.99 (paperback only), Publication,
October 23rd 2008 Post-free
for on-line credit/debit card orders
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wish to buy this book
| A
note about Articles of Faith Neil
Berrys Articles of Faith is a selective study of British intellectual
journals and their editors, among them the pioneering Edinburgh Review
as edited by Francis Jeffrey at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the New
Statesman as edited by Kingsley Martin during the middle of the twentieth
century, and the London Review of Books as edited by Karl Miller in the
1980s. The book argues that the higher journalism did much to prepare
the way for the civic-minded Britain that emerged after the Second World War and
that its exponents were unofficial civil servants with a mission to enlighten
society. In a postscript, Berry considers the embattled position of such journalism
in todays commercialised media culture, with its fixation on celebrities
and gossip and its unremitting hostility to serious discussion. This updated and
expanded edition of Articles of Faith includes an afterword that discusses
the furious controversy precipitated by the London Review of Books when,
in 2006, it published a massive polemic by the political scientists John Mearsheimer
and Stephen Walt on the subject of Americas so-called Israel Lobby.
Berry argues that the furore caused by this article re-affirmed the value of intellectual
journalism, demonstrating that, on occasion, at least, it can still have a powerful
impact on mainstream public debate. |
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A note
about Neil Berry Born
in Liverpool in 1952, Neil Berry was educated at Hillfoot Hey High School and
London University, where he was awarded a doctorate. A freelance journalist since
1980, he has contributed to many publications, including the Times Literary
Supplement, the London Review of Books, the New Statesman, the
Guardian, the Independent and the Hampstead and Highgate Express.
Since 2002, he has written a regular column for the Middle East English language
newspaper Arab News. |
| | Reviews
of the first edition of Articles of Faith
"Neil
Berry has an interesting tale to tell ..." John Gross, Times
Literary Supplement "He is full of good stories."
Nicholas
Bagnall, New Statesman "There
has never been a great magazine without a great editor, and Neil Berry's study
of 'the higher journalism' is also a series of vivid portraits of intellectual
impresarios ... Articles of Faith is written for the inquisitive lay reader
rather than the specialist, like the periodicals it commemorates ...'
Francis Wheen, Times Higher Education Supplement "Berry
has given us an enjoyable introduction to the subject and a taste for more research
on our own parts ... I recommend Articles of Faith ... most warmly."
Hazhir
Teimourian, New Humanist "Articles
of Faith is a much-needed assessment of the power of the review and of its
intellectual leadership".
NewsStead: A Journal of History and Literature "Intellectual
journalism in Britain can be traced back to the beginning of the 19th century.
Berry, a freelance journalist who contributes to contemporary journals, covers
the prominent intellectual periodicals and their key editors of the movement.
Beginning with Frances Jeffrey's editorship of the Edinburgh Review, a
quarterly, from 1802 to 1829, Berry details how British journals of opinion exercised
worldwide influence on political and literary journalism. Under Jeffrey, the Edinburgh
Review established the precedent for editorial independence, and it regularly
criticized popular authors such as Wordsworth and Coleridge. As the tempo of communication
changed, quarterlies were upstaged in the late 1800s by monthlies such as the
Fortnightly Review and the Review of Reviews. Continuing the chronology
into the 20th century, Berry relates the strange history of the anti-Communist
cultural review, Encounter, founded in 1953 and funded by the CIA. The
narrative closes with an overview of the London Review of Books, which
began in 1979, and concludes with an open question about the future of intellectual
journalism in a commercialized media culture. Readers who have a strong background
in British cultural history and an interest in the history of publishing will
appreciate this book. Academic libraries with strong collections in these areas
should consider."
Judy Solberg, The George Washington Univ. Libs., Washington, DC
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