Muckraker  

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 +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
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 +"[[Upton Sinclair]] attacked the U.S. [[meat packing industry]] in his [[Muckraker |muckraking]] novel ''[[The Jungle]]'' (1906)" --Sholem Stein
 +|}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
A '''muckraker''' seeks to expose [[Political Corruption|corruption]] of [[businesses]] or [[government]] to the public. The term originates with writers of the [[Progressive movement]] within the United States who wanted to expose corruption and scandals in government and business. Muckrakers often wrote about the wretchedness of urban life and poverty, and against the established institutions of society, such as big business. A '''muckraker''' seeks to expose [[Political Corruption|corruption]] of [[businesses]] or [[government]] to the public. The term originates with writers of the [[Progressive movement]] within the United States who wanted to expose corruption and scandals in government and business. Muckrakers often wrote about the wretchedness of urban life and poverty, and against the established institutions of society, such as big business.
-In [[British English]] usage the term tends to have a more negative connotation, indicating a greater sense of [[prurience]].{{GFDL}}+In [[British English]] usage the term tends to have a more negative connotation, indicating a greater sense of [[prurience]].
 +==Muckrakers and their works==
 +===Early Muckrakers===
 +*[[Edwin Markham]] (1852-1940) - "published an exposé of child labor in Children in Bondage" (1914)
 +*[[Samuel Hopkins Adams]] (1871–1958) — ''The Great American Fraud'', exposed false claims about [[patent medicines]]
 +*[[Ray Stannard Baker]] (1870–1946) — of ''[[McClure's]]'' & ''[[The American Magazine]]''
 +*[[Nellie Bly]] (1864–1922) ''Ten Days in a Mad-House''
 +*[[Cecil Chesterton]] (1879–1918) - of ''[[The New Witness]]'' and the 1912 [[Marconi scandal]] in Britain
 +* [[Claud Cockburn]] (1904–1981) - ''[[In Time of Trouble]]'' (1956), ''[[A Discord of Trumpets]]''
 +*[[Burton J. Hendrick]] (1870–1949) — "The Story of Life Insurance" May - November 1906 ''[[McClure's]]''
 +*[[Helen Hunt Jackson]] (1831–1885) — ''A Century of Dishonor,'' U.S. policy regarding American Indians
 +*[[Frances Kellor]] (1873–1952) — Studied chronic unemployment in her book ''Out of Work'' (1904)
 +*[[Thomas W. Lawson (businessman)|Thomas W. Lawson]] (1857–1924) ''Frenzied Finance'' (1906) on Amalgamated Copper stock scandal
 +*[[Henry Demarest Lloyd]] (1847–1903) - ''Wealth Against Commonwealth,'' exposed the corruption within the Standard Oil Company
 +*[[Frank Norris]] (1870–1902) ''[[The Octopus (Frank Norris)|The Octopus]]''
 +*[[Fremont Older]] (1856–1935) San Francisco corruption and the case of [[Thomas Mooney|Tom Mooney]]
 +*[[Jacob Riis]] (1849–1914) - ''[[How the Other Half Lives]],'' the slums
 +*[[Charles Edward Russell]] (1860–1941) — investigated Beef Trust, Georgia's prison
 +*[[George Seldes]] (1890–1995) — ''Freedom of the Press'' (1935) and ''Lords of the Press'' (1938), blacklisted during the 1950s period of McCarthyism.
 +*[[Upton Sinclair]] (1878–1968) — ''[[The Jungle]]'' (1906), U.S. meat-packing industry, and the books in the "Dead Hand" series that critique the institutions (journalism, education, etc.) that could but did not prevent these abuses.
 +*[[John Spargo]] (1876–1966) — American reformer and author, ''[[The Bitter Cry of Children]]'' (child labor)
 +*[[William Thomas Stead]] (5 July 1849 - 15 April 1912) – crusaded against child prostitution in Victorian England with ''[[The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon]]'' in the ''[[Pall Mall Gazette]]''
 +*[[Lincoln Steffens]] (1866–1936) [[The Shame of the Cities]] (1904)
 +*[[I.F. Stone]] (1907–1989) — [[McCarthyism]] and [[Vietnam War]], published newsletter, ''I.F. Stone's Weekly''
 +*[[Casey Swint]] (1904–1999) - Weekly editor of ''Atlanta Journal Constitution'', wrote ''Keys to the City'' (non-fiction book about influence of political bosses on Atlanta politics). Early Civil Rights advocate.
 +*[[Ida M. Tarbell]] (1857–1944) exposé, ''[[The History of the Standard Oil Company]]''
 +*[[John Kenneth Turner]] — (1879–1948) author of ''Barbarous Mexico'' (1910), an account of the exploitative debt peonage system used in Mexico under Porfirio Díaz.
 + 
 +===Contemporary muckrakers===
 +*[[Julian Assange]] — principal of the organization [[Wikileaks]], which runs a website devoted to leaking secret documents and records.
 +*[[Ben Bagdikian]] — journalist and major American Media Critic, also the dean emeritus of the University of California at Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism; author of ''The Media Monopoly'' and ''The New Media Monopoly''
 +* [[Donald Barlett]] and [[James B. Steele|James Steele]] — longtime investigative reporting team, now with ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]''.
 +* [[Wayne Barrett]] — investigative journalist, senior editor of the ''[[Village Voice]]''; wrote on mystique and misdeeds in [[Rudy Giuliani]]'s conduct as mayor of New York City, ''Grand Illusion: The Untold Story of Rudy Giuliani and 9/11'' (2006)
 +* [[Richard Behar]] — investigative journalist, two-time winner of the '[[Jack Anderson (columnist)|Jack Anderson]] Award'. Anderson himself once praised Behar as "one of the most dogged of our watchdogs"
 +* [[Noam Chomsky]] - a high-level, observant, circumspect muckraker working within the academic landscape.
 +* [[CounterPunch]] Muckraking newsletter, published in the United States, edited by, among others, [[Andrew Cockburn]]
 +* [[Barbara Ehrenreich]] — journalist and author - ''[[Nickel and Dimed]]: On (Not) Getting By in America''
 +* [[Stuart Goldman]] — investigative reporter, critic, syndicated columnist.
 +* [[Juan Gonzalez (journalist)|Juan Gonzalez]] — investigative reporter, columnist in ''[[New York Daily News]]''
 +* [[Amy Goodman]] — broadcast journalist, host of [[Pacifica Radio]] Network's program ''[[Democracy Now!]]''
 +* [[John Howard Griffin]] (1920–1980) — white journalist who disguised himself as a black man to write about racial injustice in the south
 +* [[Seymour Hersh]] — [[My Lai massacre]], Israeli nuclear weapons program, [[Henry Kissinger]], the [[Kennedys]], [[2003 invasion of Iraq]], [[Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse|Abu Ghraib abuses]]
 +* [[Malcolm Johnson (journalist)|Malcolm Johnson]] — exposed organized crime on the New York waterfront
 +* [[Jonathan Kwitny]] (1941–1998) — wrote numerous investigative articles for ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]''
 +* [[Joshua Micah Marshall]] - writer and journalist, operates the muckraking blog [[TPM Muckraker]], responsible for helping to break the 2006-2007 US Attorney firing scandal, the [[Duke Cunningham]] corruption case and others.
 +* [[Stephen Mayne]] — shareholder-activist and founder of ''[[crikey.com.au]]''
 +* [[Mark Crispin Miller]] — professor and writer; has written on 2000 and 2004 contested elections
 +* [[Jessica Mitford]] (1917–1996) — author of ''The American Way of Death'' (US Funeral Industry) and ''Making of a Muckraker'' (collection on various topics including writing schools and prisons)
 +* [[Michael Moore]] — [[documentary film]]maker, director of ''[[Roger & Me]]'', ''[[Bowling for Columbine]]'', ''[[Fahrenheit 911]]'', and ''[[Sicko]]''
 +* [[Ralph Nader]] — consumer rights advocate; ''Unsafe at Any Speed'' (1965), exposed unsafe automobile manufacturing
 +* [[Allan Nairn]] — [[Dili Massacre]], US backing of Haitian [[death squad]] [[FRAPH]]
 +* [[Jack Newfield]] — muckraking columnist; wrote for ''[[New York Post]]''
 +* [[Greg Palast]] — politics and elections issues, ''[[Exxon Valdez]]'', corporate crime, corruption
 +* [[John Pilger]] — award-winning war correspondent, film maker and author
 +* [[Anna Politkovskaya]] — Murdered Russian journalist critical of the Kremlin
 +* [[Jeffrey Robinson]] - author of ''The Laundrymen - Inside money laundering, the world's third largest business''
 +* [[Jeremy Scahill]] - author of ''[[Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army]]'', contributor to [[Democracy Now!]]
 +* [[Eric Schlosser]] — author of ''[[Fast Food Nation]]'', an exposé of fast food in American culture
 +* [[Morgan Spurlock]] — American Filmmaker; exposed through example the dangers of [[McDonalds]] in his documentary ''[[Super Size Me]]''
 +* Maia Szalavitz - Author of ''[[Help at Any Cost: How the Troubled-Teen Industry Cons Parents and Hurts Kids]]'', an expose of abuse in the unregulated troubled teen industry and controversy surrounding the methods and philosophy behind [[tough love]] [[behavior modification]].
 +* [[Studs Terkel]] — Legendary Chicago writer, journalist, DJ, and historian
 +* [[Hunter S. Thompson|Dr. Hunter S. Thompson]] (1937–2005) — American journalist and author credited with the invention of [[gonzo journalism]]
 +* [[Günter Wallraff]] - German journalist who famously makes extensive use of [[undercover journalism]]
 +* [[Gary Webb]] (1955–2004) — investigated [[Contras|Contra]]-[[crack cocaine]] connection, published as ''Dark Alliance'' (1999)
 +* [[Gary Weiss]] — exposed the Mob on Wall Street, described by ''[[Barron's Magazine]]'' as "an old-time gumshoe, with a soupçon of little-guy champion Jimmy Breslin and a dash of 1950s bad-boy comic Lenny Bruce"
 +* [[Bob Woodward]] and [[Carl Bernstein]] — breakthrough journalists for ''[[The Washington Post]]'' on the [[Watergate scandal]]; authors of ''[[All the President's Men]]'', non-fiction account of the scandal
 +==See also==
 +*[[Whistleblower]]
 + 
 +{{GFDL}}

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"Upton Sinclair attacked the U.S. meat packing industry in his muckraking novel The Jungle (1906)" --Sholem Stein

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A muckraker seeks to expose corruption of businesses or government to the public. The term originates with writers of the Progressive movement within the United States who wanted to expose corruption and scandals in government and business. Muckrakers often wrote about the wretchedness of urban life and poverty, and against the established institutions of society, such as big business.

In British English usage the term tends to have a more negative connotation, indicating a greater sense of prurience.

Contents

Muckrakers and their works

Early Muckrakers

Contemporary muckrakers

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Muckraker" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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