{"product_id":"history-of-print-journalism-in-india-by-krishna-kumar-tiwari-hardcover-old-book","title":"HISTORY OF PRINT JOURNALISM IN INDIA BY KRISHNA KUMAR TIWARI [HARDCOVER] OLD BOOK","description":"\u003cp\u003eThe FOCUS section of the current issue of the South Asia Chronicle has\u003cbr\u003eits origins in a panel on 'Print Journalism in Modern South Asia' organised\u003cbr\u003eby myself and Prof. Dr. Michael Mann at the European Association of\u003cbr\u003eSouth Asian Studies Conference held in Warsaw in 2016. The idea behind\u003cbr\u003ethat panel was to revisit the history of print journalism in the Indian\u003cbr\u003esubcontinent in order to expand its thematic repertoire by highlighting\u003cbr\u003eless explored topics or rethinking familiar ones from new angles. We\u003cbr\u003ewere particularly interested to discuss issues pertaining to the historical\u003cbr\u003edevelopment of different genres of journalism that have been relevant\u003cbr\u003ein the Indian context, such as advocacy, developmental or market jour-\u003cbr\u003enalism, the position of women reporters and the role of print media in\u003cbr\u003eempowering women as well as the manner in which science and tech-\u003cbr\u003enology have intersected with journalistic practice and processes of print\u003cbr\u003emedia production and distribution more generally. By bringing together\u003cbr\u003escholars and practitioners of journalism, we hoped to bridge the gap\u003cbr\u003ebetween the research and practice of journalism and add inter-\u003cbr\u003edisciplinary flavour to a field of inquiry that often tends to examine\u003cbr\u003ehistorical and contemporary developments separately. One consequence\u003cbr\u003eof this state of affairs has been a notable lack of dialogue between\u003cbr\u003ehistorical studies of journalism and research that approaches this topic\u003cbr\u003efrom the perspective of disciplines like media and communication\u003cbr\u003estudies. Furthermore, the usual compartmentalisation of press history\u003cbr\u003einto different 'phases'—colonial, post-independence, post-liberali-\u003cbr\u003esation—has also promoted the notion that these were distinct periods\u003cbr\u003ebest examined separately, rather than along a continuum that could\u003cbr\u003ereveal instructive (dis)continuities between them. Our hope as panel\u003cbr\u003econveners was that this exercise in bridging professional and disciplinary.\u003cbr\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Indian Hobby Center","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":41898122248235,"sku":null,"price":795.0,"currency_code":"INR","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0574\/6796\/1387\/files\/WhatsAppImage2025-07-15at11.10.51AM.jpg?v=1752558127","url":"https:\/\/www.indianhobbycenter.com\/products\/history-of-print-journalism-in-india-by-krishna-kumar-tiwari-hardcover-old-book","provider":"Indian Hobby Center","version":"1.0","type":"link"}