Publication information |
Source: Inland Printer Source type: journal Document type: editorial Document title: “Yellow Journalism” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 28 Issue number: 1 Pagination: 88-89 |
Citation |
“Yellow Journalism.” Inland Printer Oct. 1901 v28n1: pp. 88-89. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
yellow journalism; anarchism (causes). |
Named persons |
Cesare Borgia; Claude Duval; Isaiah; William McKinley; Minerva; Paul; Alexander Pope. |
Document |
Yellow Journalism
“LET all things be done decently, and in order.” There is no occasion for
alarm, worthy reader; the words of St. Paul may be used to “point a moral” as
well as suggest heads for a sermon. Yellow journalism, in the modern form, did
not exist when Paul was writing his letters to the faithful in Corinth, else
the already heavy labors of the saint would have been sensibly increased, yet
he had to deal with human passions and evil tendencies, which often enough burst
into flames in the great furnace of depravity, though the latter was not provided
with a hot-blast attachment in the form of an up-to-date, sensational, décolleté,
American newspaper.
There is a time, a place and a proper method for
doing all things, as a still older biblical authority asserts. The fashions,
follies, frailties and crimes of mankind must sometimes be held up to public
view, but it should be done decently, carefully, prudently, that the results
may be good rather than evil. The modern journalist wields a power more potent
than that exercised by the prophets of old, and his caution and sense of propriety
and responsibility should be correspondingly developed. He should have a present
sense of the “eternal fitness of things,” should cultivate order and decency.
Perhaps it is not going too far to say that he should possess a conscience.
Yellow journalism did not, in feeble imitation
of Minerva, spring, completely formed and fully grown, from the brain of the
evil one; its production was a development. Before spoken words were given immortality,
through the introduction of written forms, they had already begun to pander
to the vague desire for entertainment, as opposed to a yearning for knowledge;
were used to please idle curiosity, wonder, the love of the marvelous, superstition,
scandal, envy, lust—all the lower and baser passions which the wisdom of God
implanted in the breast of man. The lying words of the fanged and yellow-skinned
serpent, “Ye shall become as gods,” would have made an excellent head-line for
a contemporaneous yellow newspaper.
Yellow journalism, in a nascent form, long enough
preceded the invention of printing. It is seen in the erotic verses of ancient
poets, in sybaritic records, in false and fulsome epitaphs graven on the tombs
of royalty, in boastful, exaggerated accounts of cruel conquests, in the pages,
even, of historical writings that we have been taught to revere. We, in the
boasted self-sufficiency of our power, are wont to speculate how the ancients
managed to exist without railways, automobiles and the art of distillation;
we should rather marvel how they managed to develop such a liberal supply of
licentiousness, dishonesty, crime and general immorality, without the aid of
yellow journalism as it exists today in the leading cities of America. How the
Yellow Citizen would have enlivened society in those “Twin Cities of
the Plain,” Sodom and Gomorrah! How the Queen of Assyria would have doted on
the pictures in the Naked Truth! What a zest to pleasure the Tinted
Times would have been in the groves of Antioch! With what pleasurable emotions
Cesare Borgia would have gloated over accounts of murder and outrage as printed
daily in scores of so-called modern newspapers!
It is in no sense an exaggeration to declare that,
of all the evil influences now at work in our broad land, none exerts a more
corrupting and debasing effect upon society, without regard to age or sex, than
the sensational newspapers, to which, in doubtful compliment to the trashy novels
of a generation ago, the phrase “yellow journals” is now generally applied.
There is no intelligent, self-respecting man or woman but knows that this is
true, in a general way, yet few appreciate the evil already accomplished and
the threatening prospects for the future.
“Man is prone to evil as the sparks fly upward”—to
adopt again the Scripture-quoting habit into which some of our yellow contemporaries
“relapse” when there is a dearth of horrid murders and toothsome scandals, and
an opportunity for administering an antidote thus presents itself. Reversing
the suggestion of Isaiah, we are inclined to reject the good and choose the
evil. Knowing this, those who pander to evil impulses and longings by presenting
in an attractive, taking form, detailed accounts of hideous, unnatural crimes
and other corrupt doings of degenerate men and women, should be made to answer
for the same on earth as they surely will above—or rather, below.
It is to these accounts that the majority of those
who habitually read your genuine yellow newspaper first turn and over which
longest linger. To this charge, which is not made here for the first time, the
“yellow” editor replies that crime, when recounted in a realistic way, presents
an awful object-lesson from which the reader may be expected to recoil in disgust,
turning with increased ardor to the pursuit of virtue. Within certain limits
this is doubtless true, yet custom dulls our sensibilities, acquaintance with
crime and evil-doing in general gives us new, seemingly just, but really false
views of society and our relations to it. In the oft-quoted words of Pope:
“Vice is a monster of so frightful mien,
“As, to be hated, needs but to be seen;
“Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,
“We first endure, then pity, then embrace.”
Our yellow journalists point triumphantly to
their long circulation lists as at once justifying their policy and appealing
to advertisers. As well, almost, might the devil jubilate over the number of
his adherents as showing the moral excellence of his work. Not only the depraved,
but the thoughtless throng that “eddy round and round,” and those upon whom
the routine duties, cares and pleasures of a monotonous daily life are beginning
to pall, turn to that which promises excitement because appealing to passion
and prejudice, and eagerly devour highly colored, suggestively illustrated accounts
of missteps, misdoings and crimes, which prove all the more attractive when
the principals are persons of wealth, occupying exalted positions in society.
But the intelligent advertiser considers, not
alone the number, but the character of the persons who read a paper, the solicitor
of which appears with contract blanks. Compare two newspapers published in any
one of our large cities; one a yellow journal, the other clean, reliable, conscientious.
Which has the larger amount of really respectable, valuable advertising? Which
leads in lines which appeal to the low and vulgar? This test, which is easily
applied, will throw a flood of light on the way in which men of discernment
and affairs regard, for purposes of advertising, the circulation of a daily
paper that appeals chiefly to sensation-loving, morbid-minded people.
Not only does our modern yellow journalism cater
to low tastes and tend to convert into rakes and criminals the children of honest
parents, but it gives false ideas of life and leads to no end of failures, where,
otherwise, signal success might have been scored. The young clerk reads an escapade
of one [88][89] who has embezzled his employer’s
money and cut, for a time, quite a figure in the world. The fine clothes and
jewelry he wore, the excellent dinners he indulged in, the wild orgies which
he led, the fair women he captivated—these and other details artfully illustrated
by excellent delineators, inflame the reader’s mind, corrupt his heart and cause
similar plans to originate in his mind. Too frequently he forgets the sad ending
of the brilliant wrong-doer, or, more often, ascribes his detection and downfall
to a lack of sense and sagacity, which he himself possesses, and enters upon
a course of crime.
But these minute details of wrong-doing, particularly
when accompanied with portraits and illustrations depicting the offender, actually
encourage his class to pursue an evil course. Vanity is the strongest characteristic
of the true criminal, “born or taught,” and the world-wide notoriety he achieves
atones for the loss of his liberty—his life, even. How the bravado of Claude
Duval would have increased if, from his coign of vantage on the scaffold in
front of Newgate, he could have looked down upon a score of reporters taking
notes, and as many artists making sketches for warm and realistic articles descriptive
of his execution in numerous yellow journals. How the influence of his “taking
off” would have multiplied among those who emulated his example and thirsted
for his earthly immortality.
While keeping carefully within the limits of the
criminal law, many of our yellow journals produce pictures of a decidedly demoralizing
character, well calculated to corrupt the young and inexperienced. That they
simply “hold the mirror up to nature” is no manner of excuse. At the best human
nature is frail, and the conscientious publisher will bear that truth well in
mind, printing nothing that may cause his weaker and less well-informed and
experienced brother or sister to offend.
Such journals offend in another and almost equally
culpable way. They make savage, frequently venomous attacks upon the rich, respectable
and influential members of society, thus arousing feelings of envy and animosity
on the part of the poor and humble. This raising of ill-feeling between classes
is one of the most dangerous tendencies of our sensational times, for discontent
is easier aroused than allayed. The rich, as well as the poor, possess their
faults and follies. These should be condemned and, as far as possible, corrected,
but the line of demarcation should be the law and the practice of virtue, which
are the true touchstones of human conduct, not the possession or absence of
wealth and social position, which may, or may not, be an indication of merit.
Anarchy, which has so recently and signally reared
its horrid head in our country, is, indeed, a foreign product, but yellow journalism
is doing much to render it indigenous to our soil. No one charges that our sensational
newspapers advocate anarchy, but the application of opprobrious names to the
Chief Magistrate of the nation and the publication of scandalous cartoons, portraying
him in mean positions of servility to what they are pleased to term “organized
wealth,” can not but have produced upon overheated, morbid, degenerate minds
an effect of encouragement, a feeling that a considerable portion of the American
people, in patronizing such journals, showed their marked disapproval of the
course the President was pursuing.
The yellow journalists of America are not, Ephraim-like,
unalterably joined to their idol, but have been misled, dazzled by what seemed
brilliant success. The tragic death of Mr. McKinley is already bearing fruit;
objectionable cartoons have disappeared and publishers have awakened to a knowledge
of the fact that a great man has been stricken down, to the irreparable loss
of all loyal Americans. It has not been found necessary to mob their offices;
they have arisen to the emergency—have taken a hint, without waiting to be thrown
down stairs [sic].
The freedom of the press is one of the boasts
and bulwarks of our free land, and it must be preserved inviolate. But yellow
journalism must be checked, controlled within the limits of decency and propriety.
How is this to be accomplished? By the force of public opinion! Yielding to
insidious attractions, thousands, millions of good people have accustomed themselves
to yellow journals, until an entirely proper, high-grade newspaper has lost
its flavor, become “flat, stale and unprofitable” to their overheated imaginations.
Like the prodigal son, such persons will “come to themselves,” and the publishers
in question, noting the change of sentiment, will adapt themselves and their
publications thereto.
In the meantime, all Americans who love virtue,
home and country should taboo yellow, or parti-colored newspapers, and thus
hasten the day when journalism will be restored to its old-time respectable
and influential position, and the objectionable variety wither and fall with
the “sere and yellow leaf.”