Description:You can't be neutral about the media. Some are critical of it, some distrust it, but almost all of us are influenced by it. So why do newspapers in Goa behave the way they do? Can we get some clues from what insiders say about their experiences? This book covers over four decades of post-colonial Goa's newspaper scene. It offers colourful -- if highly personalised, and often critical -- stories of those who saw the media from the frontline. Read about the media and first assembly elections of 1963, and attempts in the 1970s to build alternatives in the English-language and Konkani. Many pages focus on the impact of the Herald (formerly O Heraldo) on journalism in contemporary Goa. In 1983, this paper switched from being the last Portuguese daily published in Asia, to an English-language newspaper printed using the latest in computers and technology. But not without challenges of its own.... Journalists explain their travails of covering rural Goa. Included is the story of the birth of the Gomantak Times. Outstation journos have their own insights on the media scene here. Two essays cover Konkani journalism, making some bold and contentious points. Among others, one essay also looks at the implications of the entry of the Times of India into Goa in 2008. Don't miss this commentary on the media in Goa if you don't miss your morning newspaper each day. * * * * Edited by Frederick Noronha Co-published by Goa, 1556 Broadway Book Centre Cover design by Cecil Pinto ISBN 978-81-905682-0-3 Price Rs 195 in India US$14 Euro 10 abroad Printed and bound in IndiaWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with In Black and White. To get started finding In Black and White, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Description: You can't be neutral about the media. Some are critical of it, some distrust it, but almost all of us are influenced by it. So why do newspapers in Goa behave the way they do? Can we get some clues from what insiders say about their experiences? This book covers over four decades of post-colonial Goa's newspaper scene. It offers colourful -- if highly personalised, and often critical -- stories of those who saw the media from the frontline. Read about the media and first assembly elections of 1963, and attempts in the 1970s to build alternatives in the English-language and Konkani. Many pages focus on the impact of the Herald (formerly O Heraldo) on journalism in contemporary Goa. In 1983, this paper switched from being the last Portuguese daily published in Asia, to an English-language newspaper printed using the latest in computers and technology. But not without challenges of its own.... Journalists explain their travails of covering rural Goa. Included is the story of the birth of the Gomantak Times. Outstation journos have their own insights on the media scene here. Two essays cover Konkani journalism, making some bold and contentious points. Among others, one essay also looks at the implications of the entry of the Times of India into Goa in 2008. Don't miss this commentary on the media in Goa if you don't miss your morning newspaper each day. * * * * Edited by Frederick Noronha Co-published by Goa, 1556 Broadway Book Centre Cover design by Cecil Pinto ISBN 978-81-905682-0-3 Price Rs 195 in India US$14 Euro 10 abroad Printed and bound in IndiaWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with In Black and White. To get started finding In Black and White, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.