词条 | James Aronson |
释义 |
James "Jim" Aronson (1915–1988) was an American journalist. He founded the left-leaning National Guardian. He was a graduate of Harvard College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Work before the GuardianAronson, known as "Jim" to his friends{{Citation needed|date=August 2018}}, worked at several publications prior to founding the National Guardian. He worked on the staffs of the Boston Evening Transcript, the New York Herald Tribune, the New York Post and The New York Times from 1946-48{{Citation needed|date=August 2018}}. Founding the GuardianAronson founded the National Guardian in 1949 with John T. McManus and Cedric Belfrage. It continued publishing until 1992. Other workAronson also worked as a professor at Hunter College of the City University of New York. In 1981 he was invited to Mainland China to teach newswriting by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Aronson was the first American to be invited to teach such classes since the Communists pushed the Nationalists off the mainland. In China he found that the content and style were what the Maoist government wanted to change about Chinese journalism, not the purpose. FootnotesWorks
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14 : 1915 births|1988 deaths|American newspaper reporters and correspondents|Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumni|Harvard College alumni|Hunter College faculty|Marxist journalists|The New York Times writers|American male journalists|20th-century American writers|New York Post people|Boston Evening Transcript people|New York Herald Tribune people|20th-century American journalists |
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