Faye Albertson (m. 1917; div. 1937)
Helen Byrne (m. 1938)
Walter Lippmann (September 23, 1889 – December 14, 1974)[1] was an American writer, reporter, and political commentator. With a career spanning 60 years, he is famous for being among the first to introduce the concept of the
Cold War, coining the term "
stereotype" in the modern psychological meaning, as well as critiquing media and democracy in his newspaper column and several books, most notably his 1922 Public Opinion.[2][3]
Lippmann also played a notable role as research director of
Woodrow Wilson's post-World War I
board of inquiry. His views on the role of journalism in a democracy were contrasted with the contemporaneous writings of
John Dewey in what has been retrospectively named the Lippmann-Dewey debate. Lippmann won two
Pulitzer Prizes, one for his syndicated newspaper column "Today and Tomorrow" and one for his 1961 interview of
Nikita Khrushchev.[4][5]
He has also been highly praised with titles ranging from "most influential" journalist[6][7][8] of the 20th century to "Father of Modern Journalism".[9][10]Michael Schudson writes[11] that
James W. Carey considered Walter Lippmann's book Public Opinion as "the founding book of modern journalism" and also "the founding book in American media studies".[12]
Early life and education
Lippmann was born on New York's
Upper East Side as the only child of Jewish parents of German origin. According to his biographer
Ronald Steel, he grew up in a "gilded Jewish ghetto".[13] His father Jacob Lippmann was a rentier who had become wealthy through his father's textile business and his father-in-law's real estate speculation. His mother, Daisy Baum, cultivated contacts in the highest circles, and the family regularly spent its summer holidays in Europe. The family had a
Reform Jewish orientation; averse to "
orientalism", they attended
Temple Emanu-El. Walter had his Reform Jewish
confirmation instead of the traditional
Bar Mitzvah at the age of 14. Lippmann was emotionally distanced from both parents, but had closer ties to his maternal grandmother. The political orientation of the family was
Republican.[14]
From 1896 Lippmann attended the Sachs School for Boys, followed by the
Sachs Collegiate Institute, an elite and strictly secular private school in the German
Gymnasium tradition, attended primarily by children of German-Jewish families and run by the classical philologist
Julius Sachs, a son-in-law of
Marcus Goldmann from the
Goldman-Sachs family. Classes included 11 hours of ancient Greek and 5 hours of Latin per week.[14]
Lippmann became a member, alongside
Sinclair Lewis, of the
New York Socialist Party.[18] In 1911, Lippmann served as secretary to
George R. Lunn, the first Socialist mayor of
Schenectady, New York, during Lunn's first term. Lippmann resigned his post after four months, finding Lunn's programs to be worthwhile in and of themselves, but inadequate as socialism.[19]
Career
Lippmann was a journalist, a media critic and an amateur philosopher who tried to reconcile the tensions between liberty and democracy in a complex and modern world, as in his 1920 book Liberty and the News.[20][21] In 1913, Lippmann,
Herbert Croly, and
Walter Weyl became the founding editors of The New Republic.
During
World War I, Lippmann was commissioned a captain in the
Army on June 28, 1918, and was assigned to the
intelligence section of the
AEF headquarters in France. He was assigned to the staff of
Edward M. House in October and attached to the American Commission to negotiate peace in December. He returned to the United States in February 1919 and was immediately discharged.[22]
Through his connection to House, Lippmann became an adviser to Wilson and assisted in the drafting of Wilson's
Fourteen Points speech. He sharply criticized
George Creel, whom the President appointed to head wartime propaganda efforts at the
Committee on Public Information. While he was prepared to curb his liberal instincts because of the war, saying he had "no doctrinaire belief in
free speech," he nonetheless advised Wilson that
censorship should "never be entrusted to anyone who is not himself tolerant, nor to anyone who is unacquainted with the long record of folly which is the history of suppression."[23]
Lippmann examined the coverage of newspapers and saw many inaccuracies and other problems. He and
Charles Merz, in a 1920 study entitled A Test of the News, stated that The New York Times' coverage of the
Bolshevik Revolution was biased and inaccurate. In addition to his newspaper column "Today and Tomorrow", he wrote several books.
Lippmann was the first to bring the phrase "
cold war" to a common currency, in his 1947 book by the same name.[24][25]
It was Lippmann who first identified the tendency of journalists to generalize about other people based on fixed ideas.[citation needed] He argued that people, including journalists, are more apt to believe "the pictures in their heads" than to come to judgment by
critical thinking. Humans condense ideas into symbols, he wrote, and journalism, a force quickly becoming the mass media, is an ineffective method of educating the public. Even if journalists did better jobs of informing the public about important issues, Lippmann believed "the mass of the reading public is not interested in learning and assimilating the results of accurate investigation." Citizens, he wrote, were too self-centered to care about public policy except as pertaining to pressing local issues.[citation needed]
Political thought
Lippmann saw nationalist separatism, imperialist competition, and failed states as key causes of war.[26] He envisioned the eventual decline of the nation-state and its replacement with large inclusive and democratic political units.[26]
As solution to the problem of failed states, he proposed the creation of regional authorities to provide political control, as well as education of public opinion to build support for these regional governments. He called for the creation of international organizations for each crisis region in the world: "there should be in existence permanent international commissions to deal with those spots of the earth where world crises originate."[26]
He saw the creation of the United States in 1789 as a model for a proposed World State or supranational government, as it was possible to create a constitution to bring order to an otherwise anarchic area. Commerce and regular interactions between people from different nations would alleviate the adverse aspects of nationalism.[26]
Later life
After the fall of the British colony
Singapore in February 1942, Lippmann authored an influential Washington Post column that criticized empire and called on western nations to "identify their cause with the freedom and security of the peoples of the East" and purge themselves of "white man's
imperialism".[27]
Lippmann was an informal adviser to several presidents.[8] On September 14, 1964, President
Lyndon Johnson presented Lippmann with the
Presidential Medal of Freedom.[30] He later feuded with Johnson over his handling of the
Vietnam War of which Lippmann had become highly critical.[8]
He won a
special Pulitzer Prize for journalism in 1958, as a nationally syndicated columnist, citing "the wisdom, perception and high sense of responsibility with which he has commented for many years on national and international affairs."[4] Four years later he won the annual
Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting citing "his 1961 interview with Soviet Premier
Khrushchev, as illustrative of Lippmann's long and distinguished contribution to American journalism."[5]
Lippmann retired from his syndicated column in 1967.[31]
Lippmann died in New York City due to cardiac arrest in 1974.[32][1]
Though a journalist himself, Lippmann did not assume that
news and
truth are synonymous. For Lippmann, the "function of news is to signalize an event, the function of truth is to bring to light the hidden facts, to set them in relation with each other, and make a picture of reality on which men can act." A journalist's version of the truth is subjective and limited to how they construct their reality. [citation needed] The news, therefore, is "imperfectly recorded" and too fragile to bear the charge as "an organ of
direct democracy."
To Lippmann, democratic ideals had deteriorated: voters were largely ignorant about issues and policies and lacked the competence to participate in public life and cared little for participating in the political process. In Public Opinion (1922), Lippmann noted that modern realities threatened the stability that the government had achieved during the
patronage era of the 19th century. He wrote that a "
governing class" must rise to face the new challenges.
The basic problem of democracy, he wrote, was the accuracy of news and
protection of sources. He argued that distorted information was inherent in the human mind. People make up their minds before they define the facts, while the ideal would be to gather and analyze the facts before reaching conclusions. By seeing first, he argued, it is possible to sanitize polluted information. Lippmann argued that interpretation as
stereotypes (a word which he coined in that specific meaning) subjected us to partial truths. Lippmann called the notion of a public competent to direct public affairs a "false ideal." He compared the political savvy of an average man to a theater-goer walking into a play in the middle of the third act and leaving before the last curtain.
John Dewey in his book The Public and Its Problems, published in 1927, agreed about the irrationality of public opinion, but he rejected Lippmann's call for a
technocratic elite. Dewey believed that in a democracy, the public is also part of the public discourse.[33] The Lippmann-Dewey Debate started to be widely discussed by the late 1980s in American communication studies circles.[34] Lippmann also figured prominently in the work Manufacturing Consent by
Edward S. Herman and
Noam Chomsky who cited Lippmann's advocacy of "manufacture of consent" which referred "to the management of public opinion, which [Lippmann] felt was necessary for democracy to flourish, since he felt that public opinion was an irrational force."[35][36]
Remarks about Franklin D. Roosevelt
In 1932, Lippmann famously dismissed future President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's qualifications and demeanor, writing: "Franklin D. Roosevelt is no crusader. He is no tribune of the people. He is no enemy of entrenched privilege. He is a pleasant man who, without any important qualifications for the office, would very much like to be President." Despite Roosevelt's later accomplishments, Lippmann stood by his words, saying: "That I will maintain to my dying day was true of the Franklin Roosevelt of 1932."[37] He believed his judgment was an accurate summation of Roosevelt's 1932 campaign, saying it was "180 degrees opposite to the New Deal. The fact is that the New Deal was wholly improvised after Roosevelt was elected."[38]
Influence on mass culture
Lippmann was an early and influential commentator on
mass culture, notable not for criticizing or rejecting mass culture entirely but discussing how it could be worked with by a government licensed "propaganda machine" to keep democracy functioning. In his first book on the subject, Public Opinion (1922), Lippmann said that mass man functioned as a "bewildered herd" who must be governed by "a specialized class whose interests reach beyond the locality." The elite class of intellectuals and experts were to be a machinery of knowledge to circumvent the primary defect of democracy, the impossible ideal of the "omnicompetent citizen".
Later, in The Phantom Public (1925), Lippmann recognized that the class of experts were also, in most respects, outsiders to any particular problem, and hence not capable of effective action. Philosopher
John Dewey (1859–1952) agreed with Lippmann's assertions that the modern world was becoming too complex for every citizen to grasp all its aspects, but Dewey, unlike Lippmann, believed that the public (a composite of many "publics" within society) could form a "Great Community" that could become educated about issues, come to judgments and arrive at solutions to societal problems.
In 1943,
George Seldes described Lippmann as one of the two most influential columnists in the United States.[39][40]
From the 1930s to the 1950s, Lippmann became even more skeptical of the "guiding" class. In The Public Philosophy (1955), which took almost twenty years to complete, he presented a sophisticated argument that intellectual elites were undermining the framework of democracy.[41] The book was very poorly received in liberal circles.[42]
Public opinion is volatile, shifting erratically in response to the most recent developments. Mass beliefs early in the 20th century were "too pacifist in peace and too bellicose in war, too neutralist or appeasing in negotiations or too intransigent"[44]
Public opinion is incoherent, lacking an organised or a consistent structure to such an extent that the views of US citizens could best be described as "nonattitudes"[45]
Public opinion is irrelevant to the policy-making process. Political leaders ignore public opinion because most Americans can neither "understand nor influence the very events upon which their lives and happiness are known to depend."[46][47]
French philosopher
Louis Rougier convened a meeting of primarily French and German
liberal intellectuals in Paris in August 1938 to discuss the ideas put forward by Lippmann in his work The Good Society (1937). They named the meeting after Lippmann, calling it the
Colloque Walter Lippmann. The meeting is often considered the precursor to the first meeting of the
Mont Pèlerin Society, convened by
Friedrich von Hayek in 1947. At both meetings discussions centered around what a new liberalism, or "neoliberalism", should look like.
Private life
Lippmann was married twice, the first time from 1917 to 1937 to Faye Albertson (*23 March 1893 – 17 March 1975). Faye Albertson was the daughter of Ralph Albertson, a pastor of the Congregational Church. He was one of the pioneers of Christian socialism and the social gospel movement in the spirit of George Herron. During his studies at Harvard, Walter often visited the Albertsons' estate in West Newbury, Massachusetts, where they had founded a socialist cooperative, the (Cyrus Field) Willard Cooperative Colony.
Lippmann was divorced by Faye Albertson to be able to marry Helen Byrne Armstrong in 1938 (died 16 February 1974), daughter of James Byrne. She divorced her husband
Hamilton Fish Armstrong, the editor of Foreign Affairs. He was the only close friend in Lippmann's life. The friendship and involvement in Foreign Affairs ended when a hotel in Europe accidentally forwarded Lippmann's love letters to Mr. Armstrong.[48]
In popular culture
He was mentioned in the monologue before
Phil Ochs' recording of "The Marines Have Landed on the Shores of Santo Domingo" on the 1966 album Phil Ochs in Concert.
^Pariser, Eli (2011). The Filter Bubble: How the New Personalized Web Is Changing What We Read and How We Think. New York: Penguin.
ISBN978-0143121237.
^Schudson, Michael (2008). "The "Lippmann-Dewey Debate" and the Invention of Walter Lippmann as an Anti-Democrat 1985–1996". International Journal of Communication. 2.
^Carey, James W. (March 1987). "The Press and the Public Discourse". The Center Magazine. 20.
^Bethell, John T.; Hunt, Richard M.; Shenton, Robert (June 30, 2009).
Harvard A to Z. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. p. 183.
ISBN978-0-674-01288-2. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
^Converse, Philip. 1964. "The Nature of Belief Systems in Mass Publics." In Ideology and Discontent, ed. David Apter, 206–61. New York: Free Press.
^Almond, Gabriel. 1950. The American People and Foreign Policy. New York: Harcourt, Brace.
^Kris, Ernst, and Nathan Leites. 1947. "Trends in Twentieth Century Propaganda." In Psychoanalysis and the Social Sciences, ed. Geza Rheim, pp. 393–409. New York: International University Press.
Schapsmeier, Edward L. and Frederick H. Schapsmeier. Walter Lippmann: philosopher-journalist (Washington:
Public Affairs Press, 1969), scholarly biography