The journalist as reformer : Henry Demarest Lloyd and Wealth against commonwealth
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The journalist as reformer : Henry Demarest Lloyd and Wealth against commonwealth
(Contributions in American history, no. 168)
Greenwood Press, 1996
- : alk. paper
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p.[187]-190) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Henry Demarest Lloyd was one of the post-bellum 19th-century's best known journalists and non-fiction writers. In fact, only E.L. Godkin exceeded Lloyd in influence and prestige, and Godkin wrote no book-length expose with the impact of Lloyd's 1894 Wealth Against Commonwealth. This biography, based in part on previously unpublished archival information, is a study of the mentality of the journalist as an advocate for reform. It is an examination of Wealth Against Commonwealth, the most influential expose and starting point for every public investigation of the late 19th-century industrial monopolies. Lloyd's pre- and post-^IWealth^R journalism is investigated as well, including Story of a Great Monopoly, Lloyd's 1881 Atlantic Monthly article said to be the first example of American muckraking, and Lloyd's published investigations of reforms such as cooperatives, labor arbitration, minimum wage, and social security. His contact with a variety of his intellectual contemporaries is also featured, including Horace Greeley, Jane Addams, Ida M. Tarbell, Samuel F. Gompers, Clarence S. Darrow, Joseph Medill, Henry George, William Dean Howells, and Eugene V. Debs.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Voice of the People Shall Be Heard "Lloyde" Security The Celebrity A New Calling Wealth Against Commonwealth The Legacy of Wealth The Rhetoric of Populism Muckraking and Other Reforms Conclusion: What Is Done By the People Lasts Forever Bibliographical Essay Index
by "Nielsen BookData"