Overview: Reinventing the Public Sphere
The Evolution and Growth of Hindi Journalism
A Rural Newspaper Revolution
Creating New Media Hubs
Local Newsgatherers
The Universe of Local News
Media and Commerce
Journalists and Politicians
Caste and Communalism
The Development Discourse
Reconfiguring the Public Sphere
Change and Attrition
Epilogue: Habermas Revisited
References
Index
Sevanti Ninan`s remarkable book draws readers deep into the media
revolution that is changing India. Ninan`s sweeping research
project, which takes her from small-town print shops across north
India to the share-markets of Mumbai, describes how Hindi-language
newspapers are carrying politics and consumption into towns and
villages. Ninan mourns three things: the collapse of small,
"printing-shop" newspapers, obliterated by capitalist rivals; the
demise of independent, "intellectual" editors, replaced by
marketing managers and pushy young members of the owners` families;
and the loss of wider regional identities as burgeoning newspapers
become obsessed with village-well news. Yet rural people are drawn
into political participation and world awareness unknown to their
parents. Ninan strives to connect her richly woven stories into the
larger pattern of media and newspaper development throughout the
world in the past 200 years. This is a book for everyone interested
in modern India, and in how print and capitalism shape
societies.
*Robin Jeffrey*
This is a fascinating and richly textured study of the rise to
influence and power of the Hindi press across northern India.
Basing herself on a huge amount of original research, yet wearing
her learning lightly, Sevanti Ninan deftly links the world of the
journal (and journalist) to wider trends in politics and economics.
The developments that she narrates, with such verve and skill, have
had a transformative impact on modern India. Therefore, no student
of Indian society, politics or history can afford to be without
this book.
*Ramachandra Guha*
Headlines… is a must-read not just for those in the Hindi
heartland, but for anybody who compulsively has a newspaper, of any
language, beside his morning cuppa. For the battles, lost and won
in the Hindu belt, are similar to those that newspapers of all
languages are waging across the country.
*Daily News Analysis*
This Book is a valuable contribution to the study of media and
society and required reading for anyone with a serious interest in
the way the market, media and society interact. The excerpts of
interviews that pepper the text remain with you long after you
close the book.
*Book Review*
Sevanti`s book braids together painstakingly gathered journalistic
information with the history of post-Independence India. She argues
her case with clarity and skill as she uncovers how Hindi
journalism has constantly mutated and grown in India.
*Mrinal Pande*
This book delves into the Hindi newspaper revolution which has been
kickstarted by a host of causes—rising literacy rates, increasing
political involvement, news channels and whetting appetites for
news and acceleration of panchayat level politics…. It is a
valuable book for those working in the industry, specifically, the
Hindi newspaper industry and provides a detailed account of the
dynamics taking place in the industry. Well-researched and
meticulously documented, the book highlights an important part of
the Indian media.
*Pitch*
Rarely do journalists focus inwards. But to her credit, Sevanti
Ninan, in a brilliant exposition of the as-yet-unfinished media
revolution in the Hindi heartland, has for the first time focused
on the growth and increasing localization of news…. Anyone remotely
interested in the transformation of rural communities into avid
news and views consumers would stand to profit immensely from
Ninan’s well-researched study dissecting threadbare the phenomenal
growth of the Hindi newspapers since the early 90s.
*Afternoon Despatch & Courier*
A compelling book…on the role and growth of Hindi media across
northern and central India…. The book brings alive India’s ongoing
Hindi newspaper revolution and studies its impact on politics,
administration and society with interesting examples. Set against
the socio-economic and political changes in the countryside, the
book traces the flowering of journalism in unexpected and
unorthodox ways.
*The Indian Express*
The story of newspapers going local…. Headlines from the Heartland
is the first account of the changes wrought by the newspaper
revolution in India’s Hindi speaking states, looking at how they
have localised furiously as they race to compete for
readership.
*The Financial Express*
Her latest book, ‘Headlines from the Heartland : Reinventing the
Hindi Public Sphere’, has been described by author and critic Robin
Jeffery as a ‘remarkable… draws readers deep into the media
revolution that is changing India’.
*Indiaenews.com*
Rarely do journalists focus inwards. But to her credit,
Sevanti Ninan, in a brilliant exposition of the as-yet-unfinished
media revolution in the Hindi heartland, has for the first time
focused on the growth and increasing localization of news.
*Cybernoon.com*
It documents the changing face of Hindi journalism in post
liberalization India, as well as the consequences of newspaper
localization for small town India.
*ndtv.com*
The author brings alive India’s ongoing Hindi newspaper revolution
and its impact on politics, administration and society.
*Deccan Herald, Bangalore*
Sevanti Ninan brilliantly brings alive India’s ongoing Hindi
newspaper revolution, and its impact on politics, administration
and society. Set against the socio economic and political
changes in the countryside, it is a remarkable story of how
journalism flowered in unexpected and unorthodox ways, and
colourful media marketing unfurled in the Hindi heartland….
"a story of expansion, localization, fragmentation"…. Sachin
Pilot called it "trivialization of the newspaper"…. "Headlines from
the Heartland" as the first serious effort to capture
the Hindi Press" not by a foreigner, but by an Indian….
"Ninan strives to connect her richly woven stories into
larger pattern of media and newspaper development throughout the
world in the past 200 years. This is a book for everyone
interested in modern India, and in how print and capitalism shaper
societies."…. Famous author and columnist Ramchandra Guha
describes the book as "fascinating and richly textured study of the
rise to influence and power of the Hindi press across
northern India
*yahoo.com*
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