Matt Carlson is associate professor of communication at Saint Louis University. He is author of On the Condition of Anonymity: Unnamed Sources and the Battle for Journalism (2011) and coeditor of Boundaries of Journalism: Professionalism, Practices and Participation (2015) and Journalists, Sources, and Credibility: New Perspectives (2010).
It is the most comprehensive statement about journalistic authority I have ever read-bar none. I can already envision how to use this book as a seminar text for my press theory class. Journalistic Authority truly fills a gaping hole in the scholarship and will be well cited as an important and significant work in the field going forward. -- Sue Robinson, University of Wisconsin Matt Carlson unpacks the historical, philosophical, and embodied linkages between professionalism and authority, and, in what amounts to a major contribution, assesses the present state of journalistic authority. Among the book's many strengths is its very generous and catholic embrace of literatures from a broad swath of disciplines-sociology, political science, philosophy, history, and, of course, communication/journalism/media studies. -- Linda Steiner, University of Maryland