Description |
1 online resource (192 pages) |
Access |
Access limited to subscribing institutions. |
Summary |
From the Frontline is the first biography of Sir Basil Clarke, the World War I newspaper correspondent and father of the UK’s public relations industry. Clarke defied a ban on reporters by living as an "outlaw" in Dunkirk during late 1914 and by the time he was forced to leave was one of only two remaining journalists near the Front. Later in the War he reported from the Battle of the Somme and caused a global scandal by accusing the government of effectively "feeding the Germans" by failing to properly enforce its naval blockade. Clarke became the UK’s first public relations officer in 1917 and established the UK’s first PR firm in 1924. His public relations career included leading British propaganda during the Irish War of Independence; the official response he wrote to Bloody Sunday in 1920 is still controversial today. |
System Details |
System requirements: Adobe Digital editions. |
Note |
Print version record. |
Subject |
Clarke, Basil, Sir, 1879-1947.
|
|
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Editors, Journalists, Publishers.
|
|
World War, 1914-1918 -- Journalists.
|
|
Journalists -- Great Britain -- Biography.
|
Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
|
Other Form: |
Print version: Evans, Richard (former journalist). From the frontline. Stroud, Gloicestershire : Spellmount, 2013. 9780752494296 (hbk.) (DLC)2014431697 |
Standard No. |
9780752497273 |
ISBN |
9780752497273 (e-pub) |
|