The Poynter Institute
Author of President Obama Election 2008: Collection of Newspaper Front Pages by the Poynter Institute
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The introduction provides a fascinating insight into the role of newspapers as an historical artifact. In an era where most news is being sought online, and most people found out the election result online, the American people responded to the historic election of Barack Obama to the Presidency by going out in droves and buying newspapers. So much so that many newspapers had to run large extra printings to satisfy demand, some papers trebled the price for the day, and other papers are even now being sold at inflated prices in online auctions. It is a curious testament to the psychological place occupied by the physical artifact of the newspaper as proof of the reality of a moment in time. A physical memento which proves that it happened, and you were there. Something which can be kept and shown to future generations.
Almost as fascinating as this phenomenon is the difference between coverage from one paper to another. Each front page is accompanied by the details of where the newspaper is based and a brief explanation to put the content of the page in context. It is immensely useful for those outside the United States that this collection contextualises the approach taken by the different papers, and the insight that this provides into the American socio-political landscape is one of the highlights of this collection.
The inclusion of international newspapers was also important in acknowledging the impact that this election had on the world, in an international climate which was growing uneasy with the effects of the Bush administration on the international landscape. The international community appeared to be equally concerned with the result in terms of demonstrating how America were really coping with the issue of racism, and how America would proceed in response to the growing economic crisis. The international community were represented with 10 papers, ranging from the very minor to the national. As an Australian I was very surprised to see Australian newspapers represented by the almost insignificant Albury-Wodonga 'Border Mail' (with a circulation of 25,000) rather than the national newspaper The Australian, which I assume was to demonstrate the range of newspapers covering the Historic result, from the National papers with high circulation to the lowly local paper. Europe was represented by papers from Austria, Belgium, England, Poland and Spain. Again I was surprised that 'The Daily Telegraph', a tabloid newspaper of dubious quality, was chosen to represent England rather than The Times. It does however feature a very nice political cartoon on the cover based on the electoral result, which was itself worth including. Asia was represented by a Japanese and an Indonesian newspaper, the Jakarta paper playing on Obama's Indonesian connection. The Middle East is represented by an Israeli paper from Tel Aviv and Africa is represented by the Kenyan 'Daily Nation'. South America is represented by the El Colombiano newspaper, and Canada is represented by 'Le journal de Montreal'.
This collection will make an historical artifact itself, capturing the moment when American voters made history by electing their first black president, which will be as useful to those who went out in droves and bought the paper on the 5th of November 2008 as the papers themselves. It will also provide a fabulous resource for school libraries who can use this collection of source documents to support studies of current American politics and society.… (more)