This page needs to be proofread.
CONTENTS
xxi
PAGE | ||
New interests of the historian | 229 | |
Adaptation of correspondent to new conditions | 230 | |
Archibald Forbes and his conception of the ideal war correspondent | 231 | |
Chapter X | ||
The Interview | ||
The interview apparently recent | 233 | |
Dr. Johnson and George III | 234 | |
Attitude of historian towards interview | 234 | |
Discredit attached to it as historical material | 234 | |
Interviews sought with persons momentarily prominent | 234 | |
Prepared interviews | 235 | |
Inspired interviews | 235 | |
Repudiated interviews | 236 | |
De Blowitz and Count Münster | 236 | |
The Emperor William interview and the Century | 236 | |
Emperor William and the Daily Telegraph | 236 | |
Edited interviews | 237 | |
Difficulties on the side of the press | 237 | |
Faked interviews | 238 | |
Impatience with faked interviews | 238 | |
Interviewing by intuition | 239 | |
Reversible interviews | 239 | |
The wooden interview | 239 | |
The stolen interview | 239 | |
The interviewer at the Second Hague Conference | 239 | |
Interview sought for definite ends | 240 | |
Von Bülow and the interview | 240 | |
Von Bissing and the interview | 240 | |
Interviews sought by officials | 240 | |
The politician and the interview | 240 | |
The interview for "domestic consumption" | 241 | |
The social interview | 241 | |
General lack of authoritativeness of interview | 242 | |
Distrust of form given it | 242 | |
National prejudices against the interview | 243 | |
Interview distrusted because of object | 243 | |
Interviewers often not specially qualified | 243 | |
Troubles of interviewers | 244 | |
Henry James on the interview | 244 | |
Opposition of medical profession | 245 | |
Difficulties put in way of interviewers | 245 | |
Prejudice against them | 246 |